This is Part 2 of UC Berkeley's 4 part mini-series: The Role of Green Chemistry in Circular Economy Supply Chains.
The Berkeley Center for Green Chemistry (BCGC) and the Laboratory for Manufacturing and Sustainability (LMAS) will look at the roles of design, material selection, and green chemistry in enabling circular economy supply chains. The session will consist of a 2-min explanatory video followed by a panel discussion with experts from the UC Berkeley ecosystem. Join us to learn more about how design decisions have impacts and consequences throughout the entire product life cycle!
https://www.thinkdif.co/big-top-tent-sessions/the-role-of-green-chemistry-in-circular-economy-supply-chains-2
The Second International Conference on Synthetic Biology (SB2.0) took place on May 20-22, 2006, at the University of California, Berkeley. The conference brought together a diverse group of participants from a variety of disciplines, including some of the world's leaders in biological engineering, biochemistry, quantitative biology, biophysics, molecular and cellular biology, bioethics, policy and governance, and the biotech industry. A collaborative effort of Berkeley Lab, MIT, UC Berkeley, and UCSF, the conference sought to promote and guide the further, constructive development of the field. SB2.0 began with two days of plenary talks and discussions focused on five research areas: energy,...
Presentation Title: Overcoming Economic Barriers to the Evolution of Urban Water Infrastructure.
Presenting within the panel on "Water, Cities, and Infrastructure: Innovations in Technology and Affordability." Moderated by: Richard Luthy, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University.
UC Berkeley's 2013 Philomathia Symposium on Water, Climate, and Society: Challenges and Strategies in a Rapidly Changing World