Boase Environmental Engineering Seminar Series

Schedule for SpringÌý2025

Stay tuned for the upcoming list of speakers for SpringÌý2025.

  • ³¢´Ç³¦²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô:ÌýOnline — &Ìý SEEC S228 Sievers Room
    Password: Spring25
  • Time:ÌýFridays, 2-3Ìýp.m., MTÌý ÌýÌý
  • Coordinator:ÌýCresten Mansfeldt

We will be adding to our SpringÌý2025Ìýschedule as the information becomes available. Please check back soon!

Jan. 17
Presenter: Gregor Macgregor, CU Boulder ENVS

Jan. 24
Presenter: Kari Norris, CU Boulder EVEN

Jan. 31
Presenter: Bill Hayes, Boulder County Public Health

Feb. 7
Presenter: Amber Ortega, atmospheric chemist, meteorology, & wildland fire smoke specialist, USDA Forest Service

Sept. 6
Presenters: EVEN faculty, TBD

Sept. 13
AmandaÌýCarrico, associate professor, associate chair of graduate studies, CU Boulder
Topic:ÌýTBA

Sept. 20
Presenter:ÌýJacob VanderRoest, PhD candidate, chemistry, Colorado State University
Topic: TBA

Sept. 27
Presenter: TessÌýEidem,Ìýsenior research scientist, CU Boulder
Topic:ÌýTBD

Oct. 4
Presenter:ÌýNina Vance,Ìý assistant professor of mechanical engineering and a faculty member of CU Boulder's environmental engineering program
Topic:ÌýTBD

Oct. 11
Presenter:ÌýGarrett Mckay, assistant professor, civil & environmental engineering, Texas A&M
Topic:ÌýTBD

Oct. 18
Presenter:ÌýSanjay Mohanty associate professor, civil and environmental engineering, University of California, Los Angeles
Topic:ÌýTBA

Oct. 25
Presenter:ÌýAnnaÌýSchroeder,Ìýengineering supervisor, South Platte Renew
Topic: TBA

Nov. 1
Presenter:ÌýEllison Carter, associate professor, civil and environmental engineering, Colorado State University
Topic: TBA

Nov. 8
Presenter:ÌýBill Hayes,Ìýenvironmental engineer, air quality division, Boulder CountyÌýHealth Department
Topic: TBA

Nov. 15
Presenter:ÌýShailyÌýRahman,Ìýassistant professor, geological sciences and INSTARR, CU Boulder
Topic: TBA

Nov. 22
Presenter: Kevin Bierlein, environmental engineer, Hydros Consulting Inc.
Topic:ÌýTBA

Dec. 6
Presenter: TBD

Friday, Sept. 22
Presenter: Daniel Yeh, professor of civil and environmental engineering, University of South Florida; 2023 , American Academy of Environmental Engineers & Scientists
Title:ÌýReinventing the Toilet for Global Sanitation: The NEWgenerator Resource Recovery Machine
Ìý

Abstract:
Billions of people worldwide suffer from poor sanitation due to a lack of wastewater infrastructure.Ìý With high CAPEX and OPEX, the conventional approach of centralized wastewater treatment plants served by an extensive sewer system is not an option for many communities. A new classification of modular and pre-fabricated non-sewered sanitation systems (NSSS, ISO 30500) has been introduced as an onsite micro-infrastructure alternative. Developed at the University of South Florida, the NEWgenerator is a solar-powered, modular, automated wastewater treatment and recycling system capable of operating independently from grid power, piped water and sewer.Ìý The core technology within the NEWgenerator is the anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR), capable of handling a wide range of wastewater strengths, intermittent flows, and prolonged shutdowns. The value proposition of the NEWgenerator is that it makes flush toilets possible in off-grid, remote locations. The NEWgenerator was a recipient of the 5th Cade Museum Prize for Innovation and the 2020 USPTO Patents for Humanity Award. This presentation will follow the two-decade journey of the NEWgenerator from concept to development to commercialization, including extended field trials in India (Kerala) and South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal). The presentation will also highlight initiatives to implement the NEWgenerator in disadvantaged communities in the U.S.

Bio:
Daniel Yeh is a professor in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of South Florida and the PI of the Membrane Biotechnology Lab. He is also a visiting professor at NASA Kennedy Space Center and co-founder of the cleantech startup BioReNEW, Inc.Ìý Professor Yeh’s research and teaching interests are in water & wastewater engineering, global water & sanitation, water/energy/food nexus, and life support systems for space travel. He is keen to communicate and promote environmental engineering to the public and school children through classroom lesson plans, museum exhibits, podcasts, TEDx and Pint-of-Science talks, and late-night talk show comedy feature.Ìý Yeh holds degrees from the University of Michigan (BS Natural »Æ¹ÏÊÓƵ, BSE Civil Engineering and MSE Environmental Engineering) and Georgia Institute of Technology (PhD Environmental Engineering). Yeh is a professional engineer, an AAEES board-certified environmental engineer, and a LEED Accredited Professional. He is also a senior member of the National Academy of Inventors and a two-time recipient of the Excellence in Innovation Award at USF.
Ìý

Friday, Sept. 1
Presenter: Walter Dodds, university distinguished professor,ÌýKansas State University
Title:ÌýBattles and skirmishes: Controversies over nutrient pollutionÌý

Nutrient pollution (eutrophication) causes many water quality problems in freshwater and marine systems including harmful algal blooms, taste and odor issues, and hypoxia. Battles and skirmishes have occurred between the public, the regulated community and environmental scientists, as well as among scientists regarding causes and solutions for eutrophication. The initial battles to regulate nutrients were met with resistance from the public, but science prevailed in some cases (such as Lake Washington) to reverse eutrophication. These initial victories led many to the view that phosphorus control alone would stop eutrophication. However, many researchers have argued that nitrogen and other nutrients can play a role, and empirical data supports this view. Understanding the best attainable condition is important in setting management goals, and much progress has been made in doing so in the developed world, and more recently in developing countries. Still, controversies occur when scientists can benefit from supporting an anti-regulation viewpoint. This example demonstrates that translating science to protective action requires understanding basic aspects of human nature.
Ìý

Friday, Sept. 8
Presenter:ÌýAlyssa Whitcraft, research professor, University of Maryland, director ofÌý, deputy director forÌý
Title:ÌýBringing space data down to Earth: how NASA achieves impact in agriculture and food security
Ìý

ÌýResearch Professor Alyssa Whitcraft is a geographer with extensive expertise in remote sensing, agriculture and interdisciplinary development studies. Her work encompasses a wide range of activities including managing large-scale multinational projects to leading applied research on remote sensing of agriculture and the integration of Earth Observations into decision support systems. As the founding executive director of NASA Acres and the co-founding deputy director of NASA Harvest, respectively the U.S.-focused and global NASA Applied Sciences programs on food security and agriculture, Whitcraft has made significant contributions to both national and global initiatives. She is recognized for her tremendous impact and leadership with the G20 Global Agriculture Monitoring (GEOGLAM) programme and Harvest Sustainable and Regenerative Agriculture Initiative (SARA).
Ìý

Friday, Sept. 15
Presenter:ÌýDenis Muthike, PhD, research associate, Moretenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience, University of Colorado Boulder
Title:ÌýDriving East Africa's climate resilience through earth observations and environmental data science

Friday, Sept. 22
Presenter: David Yeh,ÌýDaniel Yeh, professor of civil and environmental engineering, University of South Florida, 2023Ìý,Ìý American Academy of Environmental Engineers & Scientists
Title:ÌýÌýReinventing the Toilet for Global Sanitation: The NEWgenerator Resource Recovery Machine
Ìý

ÌýBillions of people worldwide suffer from poor sanitation due to a lack of wastewater infrastructure.Ìý With high CAPEX and OPEX, the conventional approach of centralized wastewater treatment plants served by an extensive sewer system is not an option for many communities. A new classification of modular and pre-fabricated non-sewered sanitation systems (NSSS, ISO 30500) has been introduced as an onsite micro-infrastructure alternative. Developed at the University of South Florida, the NEWgenerator is a solar-powered, modular, automated wastewater treatment and recycling system capable of operating independently from grid power, piped water and sewer.Ìý The core technology within the NEWgenerator is the anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR), capable of handling a wide range of wastewater strengths, intermittent flows, and prolonged shutdowns. The value proposition of the NEWgenerator is that it makes flush toilets possible in off-grid, remote locations. The NEWgenerator was a recipient of the 5th Cade Museum Prize for Innovation and the 2020 USPTO Patents for Humanity Award. This presentation will follow the two-decade journey of the NEWgenerator from concept to development to commercialization, including extended field trials in India (Kerala) and South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal). The presentation will also highlight initiatives to implement the NEWgenerator in disadvantaged communities in the U.S.Ìý

Friday, Sept. 29
Presenter:ÌýChris Zink,Ìývice president, Conservation International
Title:ÌýCarbon Crediting of Natural Climate Solutions – A practitioners guide to high integrity and impact

Friday, Oct. 6
Presenter: Assistant Professor Kim Parker, McKelvey School of Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis
Title:Ìý

Friday, Oct .13
Presenter:ÌýCloelle Danforth, scientist,ÌýOffice of the Chief Scientist
Title:ÌýWhere rubber-manufacturing adverse health effects meet the road: development of an action plan for benzene exceedances during disaster response in Houston, Texas

Friday, Oct. 20
Presenter:ÌýColorado State UniversityÌýStudent Exchange
Title: NA

Friday, Oct. 27
Presenter:ÌýKaren Bailey, assistant professor, Department of Environmental Studies, CU Boulderr
Title:Ìý

Friday, Nov. 3
Presenter:ÌýBoris Martin, CEO, Engineers without Borders
Title:Ìý

Friday, Nov. 10
Presenter:ÌýRon Garan, Mortensen Fellow,ÌýMortenson Center in Global Engineering & Resilience, CU Boulder
Title:ÌýA day in the life of a data scientistÌý

Friday, Nov. 17
Presenter:ÌýMaryam Aniya Khalili, PhD student, mechanical engineering, CU Boulder
Second presenter:Ìý
Title:Ìý

Friday, Nov. 24
No seminar due to Thanksgiving

Friday, Dec. 1
Presenter: Senator Cleave Simpson, Colorado General Assembly
Title:Ìý

Friday, Dec. 8
Presenter: Greg Whiting, associate professor, mechanical engineering, CU Boulder
Title:Ìý

Friday, Dec. 15
Presenter:ÌýJulie Zimmerman, professor of chemical & environmental engineering, Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science
Title: Designing Tomorrow