|
Energy, Environment and Resources CenterThe University of TennesseeHighlights and Initiatives |
|---|---|
July, 1997 Energy, Environment and Resources Center Jack Barkenbus, Executive Director Center For Clean Products and Clean Technologies Gary A. Davis, Director Office of Communications David Brill, Director Center for Geography and Environmental Education Rosalyn McKeown-Ice, Director Oak Ridge Technology Research and Development Program Sheila Webster, Director Pellissippi Research Institute Donald Alvic, Director Pro-Dialogue Mary R. English and David L. Feldman, Directors Water Resources Research Center Tim Gangaware, Associate Director For more information call Gail Farris at 865-974-4251 or write to UT, EERC, 311 Conference Center Building, Knoxville, TN 37996-4134. Visit our Web site at: http://eerc.ra.utk.edu/ . |
Research. The EERC's Center for Clean
Products and Clean Technologies (CCPCT) recently released a report based on a two-year
project that assessed seven alternative technologies for producing printed wiring boards.
The project, under the direction of CCPCT Associate Director Lori
Kincaid, involved the participation of CCPCT Research Scientist Mary
Swanson; CCPCT Research Associate Jack Geibig; and Rupy Sawhney,
Chris Cox, Bruce Robinson, and Nicholas Jackson from UT's College of Engineering. The
EPA-funded project assessed how the alternative technologies compared with traditional
plating techniques in terms of environmental impacts, costs, and performance. Presentations. In May, Assistant Research Professor Jonathan Rubin chaired a panel on "Needs for an Economic Assessment" as part of a national workshop funded by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The panel explored various methods for measuring the economic effects of ozone concentrations on ecological systems. The conference, held in Raleigh, North Carolina, was convened to advise the EPA on research needs with respect to setting a new secondary standard for ozone concentrations. This year, Rubin will be leading a study on episodic ozone control under the auspices of UT's Waste Management Research and Education Institute. Citations. Knoxville's Second Creek Task Force (SCTF), under the leadership of Tim Gangaware, associate director of the EERC's Water Resources Research Center, has been cited in a book titled Lessons Learned. The book was published by American Rivers, a conservation organization based in Washington, D.C. The task force, which received a 1996 Urban River Award from American Rivers, is cited for its efforts to assess pollution affecting Second Creek, devise a cleanup strategy, and implement stream-bank stabilization and habitat restoration. Publications/Papers. Lori Kincaid, CCPCT associate director, and Senior Research Associate Catherine Wilt published "There Auto be a Law" in the March 1997 edition of Resource Recycling. Kincaid and Wilt's article, based on a CCPCT study of vehicle recycling programs in 21 developing and industrialized countries, reports that many countries have proposed or implemented policies designed to support recycling of vehicles once the vehicles have reached the end of their useful lives. Senior Research Scientist David Feldman co-authored the paper
"Reforestation: What Happens When the Joint Implementation Project Ends?" which
was presented at the International Conference on Technologies for Activities Implemented
Jointly. The conference was held in Vancouver, British Columbia, in May. Feldman
wrote the paper with Gregg Marland, an ORNL researcher, and Bernhard Schlamadinger of
Joanneum Research in Graz, Austria. The paper explores some of the issues inherent in
various proposed forest-management projects aimed at reducing greenhouse gases. In
January, Feldman and Graduate Research Assistant Ruth Anne
Hanahan attended Environmental Management in the Nineties: Using the Right
Tools, in San Antonio, Texas. At the conference, Feldman presented
the findings of a report he prepared with Research Associate Ralph Perhac
and Hanahan on comparative risk projects. |
The EERC conducts unbiased analytical and multidisciplinary research designed to promote real-world solutions to problems in the fields of energy, environment, technology, and economic development.
Go back to Highlites index.
Go back to e.e.r.c. publications.
Go back to e.e.r.c. Home Page.