EEM News Database
Use the search engine below to jump to specific issues by date, or to specific articles by keyword search.
EEMI Stars at the 2016 GreenGov Conference
November 5, 2016

EEMI Conducts Seminar on Carbon Trading in China
November 4, 2016

Spring 2016 EEMI Faculty Activities
May 2, 2016

Spring 2016 EEMI Student Activities
May 2, 2016

EEMI Short Courses Kick Off in a Big Way
May 2, 2016

R&D; Showcase Attracts Record Number of Entries
May 4, 2015
A record number of students -- more than 120, including a number of environmental and energy projects -- competed in the Ninth Annual School of Engineering and Applied Science (SEAS) Research and Development Showcase at the George Washington University in the spring 2015 semester, a big jump in participants from previous years.

EEM Graduate Highlighted in Booz Allen Hamilton’s Profiles in Sustainability
May 4, 2015
Kristin Deason, a 2009 doctoral graduate of the Environmental and Energy Management program, was spotlighted in the corporation-wide publication of the environmental consulting giant Booz Allen Hamilton in May 2015. Below is the article on Kristin, who is a Senior Associate with Booz Allen in charge of the corporation’s U.S. Army Energy Initiatives Task Force support team.

EEM Students and Faculty Meet with EPA Assistant Administrator
May 4, 2015
EEM students and faculty met with former EPA Acting Assistant Administrator for Water as part of the University’s Sustainability Collaborative “Frontiers in Sustainability” seminar series. At the seminar, Ms. Stoner made a presentation on “Too Much, Too Little, Too Polluted: Restoring Water Sustainability in the US.”

EEM Professors Lead Workshop Nutrient Monitoring to Support Water Quality Trading
May 4, 2015
On June 24, 2015, EEM Professors Royce Francis and Jonathan Deason served as technical and plenary session moderators at the Workshop on Nutrient Monitoring to Support Water Quality Trading, conducted by the Partnership on Technology Innovation and the Environment (PTIE) in Washington, D.C. The PTIE is a partnership among government, business, investment, academic and environmental organizations to accelerate the development and deployment of technologies to protect public health and the environment. The organization is exploring ways to leverage its multi-sector membership to increase the future use of low cost nutrient sensor technology. The effort complements the EPA’s National Nutrient Sensor Challenge that is aimed at to reduce the price of nutrient sensor technologies.