Research

Researchers create effective, low-cost material for carbon capture at power plants and maybe for cars

Chemists from Stanford, UC-Berkeley and Texas A&M, have created a cheap, easy and energy-efficient way to capture carbon dioxide from smokestacks and possibly vehicles. An inexpensive polymer called melamine is used as a carbon capture material which could potentially be scaled down to capture emissions from movable sources.

Enabling Innovation: Grants nurture interdisciplinary environmental solutions

The Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment is awarding $1.65 million to 10 innovative projects. One of the projects funded is mitigating a source of lead in South Asia - informal recycling of lead acid batteries from 3-wheeled EVs. The trial will measure the project's effect on lead emissions, greenhouse gas emissions, profits and livelihoods.

Replacing the “Take-Make-Waste” Model with Sustainable Supply Chains

In a new white paper, researchers at the Stanford Graduate School of Business, find that a growing number of companies are realizing the urgency of shifting their operations toward designing products for durability and recyclability, reducing material requirements, consuming fewer resources in manufacturing and shipping and keeping items in circulation to boost their lifespan.

The Whole World In Its Plans

The Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability is designed to catalyze solutions to our most urgent environmental challenges. In addition to traditional academic departments, it includes expanded interdisciplinary research collaborations and a "sustainability accelerator" to drive policy and technology solutions.

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