MERLOT - Multimedia Education Resource for Learning and Online Teaching
Home Communities Learning Materials Member Directory My Profile About Us

Material Detail

Become a Member | Log In

Researching solutions to global water shortages

Bookmark and Share
 
Location: Go to Material
Material Type: Online Course
Technical Format: Podcast
Date Added to MERLOT: September 17, 2010
Date Modified in MERLOT: September 17, 2010
  [Report Broken Link For This Material]

Author: Professor Nidal Hilal   The University of Nottingham
Submitter : steven stapleton

Description:
Director of the University of Nottingham's Centre for Clean Water Technologies. Making sure the world's population has enough drinking water is one of the biggest challenges we face today. A rapidly increasing global population, the fact that only a very small percentage of global water is available for consumption and an uneven global distribution of clean drinking water are the main problems in regard to the current global water crisis. Professor Hilal discusses these problems and some of the possible solutions the University's Centre for Clean Water Technologies is currently researching. He discusses advances the centre has made, such as the development of membrane technology to aid in the re-use of water. The world-leading reputation for research that Professor Hilal has earned in the fields of membrane technology and water treatment have been formally recognized by the award of the prestigious "Kuwait Prize of Applied Science for Water Resources Development" for the year 2005. This prize is one of the highest scientific honours awarded in the Middle East for intellectual achievement. It marked the first time that the award had been made to an academic in a UK university.

Keywords:
Drinking water, Population, Water shortages

Browse in Categories:

More information about this material:
Primary Audience: College General Ed
Mobile Compatibility: Not specified at this time
Language: English
Material Version: 0
Cost Involved: no
Source Code Available: no
Accessiblity Information Available: no
Copyright: yes
Creative Commons: Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States

About this material:

Peer Reviews (not reviewed)
Workflow status (accepted for review)
Comments (none)
Learning Exercises (none)
Personal Collections (none)
Accessibility Info (none)
 

Add your own:

Write a comment
Create a learning exercise
Add accessibility information


 
Report this as an Inappropriate Material
QR Code for this Page
 
 
--%>