Plant Preservation Greg Lowry, the Walter J. Blenko, Sr. Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University The Future of Plant Sustainability and Effective Growth to Meet the Food Needs of a Growing World Population

Published: Dec. 25, 2019, 8:05 a.m.

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In this important podcast, Greg Lowry, the Walter J. Blenko, Sr. Professor, Civil and Environmental Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University, discusses the importance of nanotechnology, environmental science nano impact factor, and how nanotechnology may be the key to plant sustainability.


Lowry is the esteemed deputy director of the NSF/EPA Center for Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology (CEINT). He worked toward his B.S. in chemical engineering at the University of California at Davis (UC Davis), and he also earned a degree (M.S.) in civil and environmental engineering from University of Wisconsin in Madison. Lowry also holds a Ph.D. in civil and environmental engineering from Stanford.


Lowry\\u2019s interest lies in the sciences, specifically geochemistry, nanochemistry, and environmental nanotechnology. Lowry talks about his team\\u2019s goal to make agriculture more sustainable. Lowry explains how current agriculture practices are extremely inefficient, and as global population is on the rise, sustainability\\u2014making plants more efficient and resilient to climate change, etc.\\u2014will be critically important. Lowry discusses some of the work they\\u2019ve done on specific types of plants, such as the wheat, corn, and tomato plants. Lowry explains how they engineer nano materials to deliver nutrients to plants in a more efficient way, which benefits plant growth, especially when the plants may

be facing problematic climate or soil conditions.\\xa0

Lowry provides a detailed overview of how they designed and produced coatings for nano particles that can allow them to penetrate the plant and thereby successfully provide nutrients while avoiding any negative effects to the plant\\u2019s health.


In this podcast:


Nanoparticles: why so important?

How will increasing populations force a change in how we grow food?

The importance of plant sustainability

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