Finalists Nominated for 2007 Engineering Award
19 Julio 2007 - 11:16AM
PR Newswire (US)
-- International jury nominates 30 finalist teams STUTTGART,
Germany, July 19 /PRNewswire/ -- The finalists for the Mondialogo
Engineering Award 2007 have been decided. Yesterday, at the
Mercedes-Benz-Museum in Stuttgart-Unterturkheim, Germany an
international jury nominated 30 teams to proceed to the final of
the worldwide engineering contest by DaimlerChrysler and UNESCO. At
the beginning of December 2007, the nominated teams will be
attending the Mondialogo Symposium in Mumbai/India, where the best
of them will be honoured with the Engineering Award. The ten
winning teams can look forward to cash prizes each worth euro
20,000. Another twenty teams will receive an honorary mention, each
carrying euro 5,000 in prize money. (Logo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020212/DCXLOGO ) A total of
3,200 students of engineering sciences from 89 countries had
registered for the second edition of the Engineering Award. Key
factors for the submitted projects to achieve a nomination for the
final were their creativity and quality, their relevance for the
United Nations' Millennium Goals and their feasibility. The
intensity of intercultural dialogue and the exchange of knowledge
between the engineering students also played a crucial role in the
assessment. Deciding which of the participating teams best
fulfilled these criteria was the task of a seven-member
international jury made up of respected representatives from
science and engineering: -- Peggy Oti-Boateng (Ghana), Director of
the Technology Consultancy Centre at the University of Kumasi,
Ghana, and member of the UNESCO Working Group for Technology and
Poverty Reduction -- Kamel Ayadi (Tunisia), President of the World
Federation of Engineering Organizations -- Ali Uddin Ansari
(India), Director of the Centre for Environment Studies and
Socioresponsive Engineering -- Paul Jowitt (Scotland), Director of
the Scottish Institute of Sustainable Technology -- Shirley M.
Malcom (USA), Head of Education and Human Resources of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science -- Walter Erdelen
(Germany), Assistant Director-General for Natural Sciences at
UNESCO -- Bharat Balasubramanian (Germany), Vice President Group
Research & Advanced Engineering E/E, IT and Processes at
DaimlerChrysler AG The engineering contest is a constituent part of
the initiative "Mondialogo -- Intercultural Dialogue and Exchange",
launched by DaimlerChrysler and UNESCO in October 2003. Mondialogo
also includes an international school contest and is one of the
most important private-public partnerships for the cultural arm of
the United Nations. Through the Mondialogo Engineering Award,
DaimlerChrysler and UNESCO are aiming to promote intercultural
dialogue and knowledge transfer between engineering students on all
continents and to campaign for understanding, respect and tolerance
between cultures. At the same time, the contest is also intended to
produce sustainable solutions for problems in developing countries.
Every project team is made up of groups of students from two
technical universities or colleges, with one group coming from a
developing country and the other from an industrialized nation. The
teams had six months in which to devise a technical solution that
will have a direct practical benefit for the population of a
developing country and help to improve the quality of life there.
Partner teams generally cooperate via the Mondialogo Internet
Portal, where a virtual office is set up for every project team
(http://www.mondialogo.org/). In principle, though, to promote
exchange amongst the members and achieve progress in the project
idea, communication could take place using any channel. Although
implementation of the proposed solutions is not part of the
Mondialogo Engineering Award, previous Mondialogo projects show
that most proposals do not remain purely theoretical. In all, 11
ideas developed during the first edition of the engineering contest
have resulted in specific projects and have been implemented.
Examples include new methods of drinking water preparation, the
development of biofuels and the use of solar energy in rural areas.
Nominated teams with US-participation: Team University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign, USA Jagannath Institute for Technology and
Management, Orissa, India Project Title Solar-charged,
Battery-Operated LED Lanterns to Replace Oil Lamps in the
Developing World Team John-Hopkins University (Engineers Without
Borders), Baltimore, USA Zakhe Agricultural College
(Agriculturalists Without Borders), KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
Project Title Sustainable Irrigation for Community Agriculture in
rural South Africa Team Birzeit University, Deir Qaddis,
Palestinian Territories University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA
Project Title Wastewater Treatment and Reuse produced from Olive
Oil Mills Team University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogota, Colombia Project Title
Design and Manufacture of Dynamic Response Foot Prostheses for
Landmine Victims in Impoverished Areas Team Malaviya National
Institute of Technology, Jaipur, India Fachhochschule Bingen,
Bingen, Germany Stanford University, Stanford, USA Project Title
Improvement of Health Conditions in Rural India using Renewable
Energy Sources Team Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, Lima
Peru University of Rochester, New York, USA Project Title Improving
Diagnosis and Treatment of Tuberculosis and Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
in Peru Using Medical Imaging Techniques Team Michigan State
University, East Lansing, USA HuaZhong University of Science and
Technology, Wuhan, China University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy
Project Title Inexpensive multi-functional medical equipment design
Team National Advanced School of Polytechnics, Yaounde, Cameroon
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA Project Title
Exploitation and Valorization of Certain Forest Products in
Cameroon Team Pontificia Universidad Catolica del Peru, Lima, Peru
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York, USA Project Title
Casa Ecologica Andina Team University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
(Engineers without borders), USAEbonyi State University, Abakaliki,
Nigeria Project Title The Adu Achi Water Development Team
University of California, Los Angeles, USA Pontificia Universidad
Catolica del Peru, Lima, Peru Project Title Global Basic Needs in
an Integrated Sustainable Approach Team Michigan Technological
University, Houghton, USA PNG University of Technology, Lae, Papua
New Guinea Project Title Sustainable Treatment of Wastewaters from
Garages and Workshops Using Coconut Husk and Shell Wastes as Filter
Materials Team The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and
Art, New York, USA Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and
Technology, Kumasi, Ghana Project Title Development of a
sustainable fluoride filter for use in the Bongo District of Ghana,
Africa More information on Mondialogo, the nominees for the
Engineering Award and the members of the jury is available at
http://www.mondialogo.org/.
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020212/DCXLOGO
http://photoarchive.ap.org/ DATASOURCE: DaimlerChrysler AG CONTACT:
Sue Williams of UNESCO, +33 (0)1 45 68 17 06, Fax, +33 (0)1 45 68
56 59, ; or Andre Paris of MONDIALOGO, +49 (0)69/7434 88309, Fax,
+49 (0)69 7434 88809, ; or Han Tjan of DaimlerChrysler Corporate
Communications, +1-212-909-9063, Fax, +1-212-909-9065, ; or Ursula
Mertzig-Stein, +49 (0)711 17-93315, Fax, +49 (0)711 17-94531, , or
Susann Rohr, +49(0)711 17-97638, Fax, +49(0)711/17-97939, , both of
DaimlerChrysler AG Web site: http://www.daimlerchrysler.com/
http://www.mondialogo.org/
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