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KAUST professor wins Frontiers Science Prize

KAUST ·

KAUST Associate Professor Raquel Peixoto has been named the 2024 National Champion for Saudi Arabia by the Frontiers Planet Prize. Peixoto won the prize for her research on using probiotics to enhance coral reef resilience against climate change. Her work has led to the establishment of the RSRC Coral Probiotics Village in the Red Sea and collaborations with global pharmaceutical companies. Why it matters: This award highlights the growing recognition of Saudi Arabia's contributions to marine conservation and innovative approaches to addressing climate change impacts on vital ecosystems.

Professor Matthew McCabe and team win Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water

KAUST ·

Matthew McCabe, director of the KAUST Climate and Livability Initiative (CLI), and his team have been awarded the 2022 Prince Sultan Bin Abdulaziz International Prize for Water in the Water Management and Protection category. The award recognizes their innovative use of satellites for water accounting and management, harmonizing data from CubeSat satellite platforms. They produced the highest resolution estimates of water usage ever retrieved from space, using data from Planet's constellation of small satellites. Why it matters: This award highlights the growing role of remote sensing technologies and KAUST's leadership in addressing critical climate and sustainability issues in water resource management within Saudi Arabia and globally.

KAUST Professor Carlos M. Duarte receives award for research in ecology and conservation

KAUST ·

KAUST Professor Carlos M. Duarte received a Frontiers of Knowledge Award for Ecology and Conservation Biology from Fundación BBVA in Spain. Duarte's research focuses on global marine science problems and his contributions to Saudi Vision 2030. The award recognizes his leadership and dedication to expanding knowledge of ocean flora, fauna, and their carbon sequestering capacities. Why it matters: Recognition of KAUST faculty highlights the university's growing prominence in environmental research and its alignment with Saudi Arabia's sustainability goals.

Earthshot Prize enlists KAUST to save the planet

KAUST ·

KAUST has been selected as an official nominator for The Earthshot Prize, an environmental initiative founded by Prince William and Sir David Attenborough. The prize will award £1 million each to five winners annually from 2021 to 2030, focusing on solutions for environmental challenges. KAUST is one of 41 universities and the sole representative from Saudi Arabia among the nominators. Why it matters: This partnership positions KAUST as a key player in identifying and promoting innovative environmental solutions within the region and globally, aligning with Saudi Arabia's sustainability goals.

New resource to promote scientific literacy for sustainable development

KAUST ·

KAUST, in partnership with UNDP Saudi Arabia and Frontiers for Young Minds, has launched "The SDG Collection" to promote scientific and sustainability literacy among children. The collection will feature articles about each of the 17 SDGs in the open-access journal Frontiers for Young Minds, with contributions from KAUST researchers. The initiative includes an interactive peer-review process involving students from local schools like The KAUST School and will be translated into Arabic. Why it matters: This project enhances accessibility to complex scientific concepts for Arabic-speaking children and supports Saudi Arabia's Vision 2030 by inspiring future generations toward sustainable development.

Adaptation requires cross-domain solutions

KAUST ·

Carlos Duarte, a professor of Marine Science at KAUST, discusses climate change adaptation and mitigation. He was interviewed outside the KAUST Museum of Science and Technology. The interview is part of a Frontiers Research Topic on Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's focus on addressing climate change through scientific research and its engagement with international platforms like Frontiers.

The day the Earth smiled

KAUST ·

Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco, who led the imaging science team for the Cassini mission to Saturn, was a keynote speaker at KAUST's 2018 Winter Enrichment Program. Porco aimed to recreate the Pale Blue Dot photograph of Earth taken by Voyager 1. On July 19, 2013, Cassini's cameras captured another Pale Blue Dot image of Earth when Saturn eclipsed the Sun. Why it matters: The event fostered contemplation on Earth's place in the universe among the KAUST community.

Solving the grandest of challenges

KAUST ·

William Tang from Princeton spoke at KAUST about using deep learning to achieve nuclear fusion. Nuclear fusion, recreating stellar conditions on Earth, is considered the "holy grail" of power sources because it is clean and does not produce radioactive waste. Tokamaks, invented by Soviet physicists, are devices used to contain plasma, the superheated ionized gas required for fusion. Why it matters: KAUST is contributing to research on sustainable energy solutions, including exploring the potential of AI in nuclear fusion, a potentially transformative clean energy source.