UH grad students train with national experts to tackle clean energy issues
The summer program is supported by a UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ project called “Ka mana o ka l¨¡: Modeling our energy future.”
The summer program is supported by a UH ²Ñ¨¡²Ô´Ç²¹ project called “Ka mana o ka l¨¡: Modeling our energy future.”
UH News interviewed whale expert Lars Bejder to hear how innovative technologies are helping experts monitor the health of marine mammals.
Ashley Mackenzie will co-write a chapter in this historic attempt to take stock of U.S. lands, waters, wildlife, and the benefits provided to our economy.
Researchers will assess how bioenergy generated from agricultural residues and animal manures could contribute to ±á²¹·É²¹¾±ʻ¾±¡¯²õ renewable energy.
The blue economy are coastal- and ocean-based industries such as aquaculture, biotechnology or blue carbon, where C02 is sequestered from the atmosphere to mitigate climate change.
Dean Parwinder Grewal announced his mission and vision for the college at a four-day conference in April.
Revitalization of loko iʻa has the potential to significantly increase locally available seafood.
The Institute for Sustainability and Resilience received $950,000 from the Healy Foundation to support a five-year cohort of Healy Climate Fellows.
Cities with complex networks of buried infrastructure have interaction with shallower and saltier groundwater which exacerbates corrosion and failure of critical systems.
Sen. Mazie Hirono toured Lyon¡¯s Hawaiian Rare Plant Program Greenhouse to see and plant Hawaiian endangered plants.