Study shows arid lands mitigate atmospheric carbon

A national study, published in the journal Nature Climate Change and featuring the work of sustainability scientist Kiona Ogle, demonstrates that arid lands absorb a large amount of carbon otherwise released into the atmosphere.

Leadership program gives Palestinians roadmap to sustainable energy

Representatives from Arizona and Palestine met March 24-28 at Arizona State University's Tempe campus for the Renewable Energy Leadership Training Program, an opportunity to discuss energy-related struggles, share successes and develop the roadmap toward a sustainable energy system.

Sustainability student recognized at Pitchfork Awards

School of Sustainability student Kevin Keleher is named Changemaker Entrepreneur of the Year at the 2014 Pitchfork Awards. GreenLight Solutions, the sustainability consulting service Keleher co-founded with four other students, is named

Nonprofit wins ASU sustainability award for "urban infill"

Project Rising, a nonprofit seeking to reactivate the vacant lots of Phoenix using sustainable building techniques, accepted the Walton Sustainability Solutions Award at the Social Venture Partners of Arizona's "Fast Pitch" competition.

ASU scientist leads research on safety of nanoparticles

Paul Westerhoff, School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment, is leading a $5M multi-university research project funded by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to examine whether nanoparticles pose threats to the environment and human health.

ASU launches ASU Zero Waste initiative

On April 1, Arizona State University launched the university-wide Zero Waste at ASU initiative, which aims to achieve zero solid waste by 2015 using both diversion and aversion techniques.

Meet our alumni: Jessica Fox

Now working to bring renewable surface water from the Colorado River to Central Arizona, School of Sustainability graduate Jessica Fox has a long-standing interest in Western water planning.

The last drop?

By Christopher Vaughan for ASU Magazine. March 2014. Soaking up knowledge to conserve that most precious of resources – water When ASU professor Enrique Vivoni brings American students across the

dead, dried corn stalks in field

Sustainability scientist is cited in summary of govt. report

Senior Sustainability Scientist Netra Chhetri is cited in a Christian Science Monitor article summarizing a report released by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). In the article, Chhetri - who

Women help communities cope with troubled shrimp industry

Senior Sustainability Scientist Maria Cruz-Torres, School of Transborder Studies, finds that women in the western Mexican state of Sinaloa are playing a critical role in helping their coastal communities weather negative environmental impacts on the shrimp industry.

New DCDC publication

Priorities in Residential Water Use: A Trade-Off Analysis Authors Edward Sadalla, Department of Psychology, Arizona State UniversityAnna Berlin, Department of Psychology, Arizona State UniversityRebecca Neel, Department of Psychology, Arizona State

Climate change will reduce crop yields sooner than expected

Senior Sustainability Scientist Netra Chhetri, an assistant professor with the Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes, co-authored a study that indicates significant declines in the essential food crops maize, wheat and rice by the early 2030s.