The Water and Environment society is for engineers with an interest in the environmental and water aspects of civil engineering.
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A team of scientists have developed an artificial 'worm gut' to break down plastics, offering hope for a nature-inspired method to tackle the global plastic pollution problem.
EU industries from food and drinks to chemicals and biotechnology are seeking to profit from materials in water after it has been used.
In 1997 Captain Charles Moore was sailing from Hawaii to California when he noticed a steady stream of plastics bobbing in the ocean. He had discovered the Great Pacific garbage patch.
Thermal decomposition is helping to green two major EU manufacturing industries.
Chemical engineers create a zwitterionic hydrogel system for single-step water treatment with minimal environmental footprint.
In hopes of producing concrete structures that can repair their cracks, researchers are putting a new twist on an old trick for improving the durability of concrete. Fibre reinforcement has been around since the first masons were mixing horsehair into their mud. But this research team is taking this method to the next level by turning reinforcing fibres into a living tissue system that rushes concrete-healing bacteria to the site of cracks to repair the damage.
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