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Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments Grants Challenge Event

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14 Apr, 2024

This post was originally published on Climate Links

Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments Grants Challenge Event
jschoshinski
Thu, 04/11/2024 – 20:26

Join high-level speakers from IUCN, USAID, and Norad for a special event: ‘Together, we RISE: Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments (RISE) grants challenge winners announcement and 2024 call for proposals launch’. They will officially announce the newest RISE challenge grantee winners and launch the 2024 call for RISE grants challenge proposals. The event will provide prospective applicants a head start on essential information, including eligible countries, timelines, and thematic priorities.

The newest RISE grants challenge winners

In 2023, there were 814 applications to the Resilient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Environment (RISE) grants challenge, a unique fund addressing gender-based violence and environment linkages.

Join on April 25th to learn more about the RISE grants challenge and meet the four new RISE winners coming from around the world to share their strategies to address multiple and overlapping manifestations of gender-based violence taking place in the context of climate action, conservation, sustainable management and protection of land and natural resources in climate-vulnerable communities.

Launching the 2024 call for proposals

The event will also launch the 2024 call for RISE grants challenge proposals and provide prospective applicants a head start on essential information, including eligible countries, timelines, and thematic priorities.

Teaser Text

Together, we RISE: Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments (RISE) grants challenge winners announcement and 2024 call for proposals launch.

Event Date

Thursday, April 25, 2024, 1:00
– 2:30 pm UTC

Advanced registration required

Off

Event Format

Event Type

Webinar/Presentation

Topic

Biodiversity Conservation
Climate
Coastal
Gender and Social Inclusion
Marine
Resilience

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2024-04-25 13:00:00
2024-04-25 14:30:00
Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments Grants Challenge Event

Join high-level speakers from IUCN, USAID, and Norad for a special event: ‘Together, we RISE: Resilient, Inclusive and Sustainable Environments (RISE) grants challenge winners announcement and 2024 call for proposals launch’. They will officially announce the newest RISE challenge grantee winners and launch the 2024 call for RISE grants challenge proposals. The event will provide prospective applicants a head start on essential information, including eligible countries, timelines, and thematic priorities.
The newest RISE grants challenge winners
In 2023, there were 814 applications to the Resilient, Inclusive, and Sustainable Environment (RISE) grants challenge, a unique fund addressing gender-based violence and environment linkages.
Join on April 25th to learn more about the RISE grants challenge and meet the four new RISE winners coming from around the world to share their strategies to address multiple and overlapping manifestations of gender-based violence taking place in the context of climate action, conservation, sustainable management and protection of land and natural resources in climate-vulnerable communities.
Launching the 2024 call for proposals
The event will also launch the 2024 call for RISE grants challenge proposals and provide prospective applicants a head start on essential information, including eligible countries, timelines, and thematic priorities.



Global Climate Change
team@climatelinks.org
UTC
public

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From glass waste to energy-efficient bricks

From glass waste to energy-efficient bricks

RMIT University engineers have created a new type of energy-efficient brick from scrap materials.

In collaboration with Australian recycling company Visy, the engineers used a minimum of 15% waste glass and 20% combusted solid waste (ash) as substitutes for clay in their bricks.

Team leader Associate Professor Dilan Robert said about 1.4 trillion bricks were used in construction projects globally every year.

“Business-as-usual brick production produces harmful emissions — including carbon dioxide, sulfur dioxide and chlorine — and puts a serious strain on our natural resources, particularly clay,” said Robert, from RMIT’s School of Engineering.

Replacing clay with waste materials in the production of the new bricks helped reduce the firing temperature by up to 20% compared with standard brick mixtures, offering potential cost savings to manufacturers.

Team leader Associate Professor Dilan Robert (third from left) with the RMIT research team behind the energy-smart bricks in a lab at RMIT University. Credit: Seamus Daniel, RMIT University.

Importantly, test results indicated that using these bricks in the construction of a single-storey building could reduce household energy bills by up to 5% compared to regular bricks, due to improved insulation.

In addition to their energy efficiency benefits, the new bricks comply with stringent structural, durability and environmental sustainability standards, with the technology meeting the key compliance requirement of fired clay bricks set by Standards Australia (AS 3700).

“Bricks play a key role in preventing energy loss from buildings,” Robert said.

“We can also produce lightweight bricks in a range of colours from white to dark red by changing our formulations.”

Dr Biplob Pramanik, the RMIT team’s environmental engineer, said the new bricks were safe to use in construction projects.

“Our bricks, manufactured from industry waste, meet state environmental regulations,” he said.

Waste glass that the team can use in their energy-smart bricks. Credit: Seamus Daniel, RMIT University.

In Victoria, Visy recycles glass packaging back into new bottles and jars. The new bricks provide a solution for the use of fines — pieces of glass smaller than 3 mm — which cannot be recycled into bottles.

Paul Andrich, Innovation Project Manager at Visy, said the company was thrilled to find a solution for material that cannot be recycled into food and beverage packaging.

“Diverting this waste into bricks with added insulation, rather than landfill, is another way we are powering the circular economy,” he said.

The researchers now plan to expand the use of their technology.

“We are focusing on scaling up the production process to facilitate the commercialisation of our innovative bricks in collaboration with brick manufacturers in Melbourne,” Robert said.

The team is also looking to collaborate with industry to explore applications of waste material in other construction products.

Their latest research has been published in the international journal Construction and Building Materials.

Top image caption: The team’s energy-smart bricks in a range of colours. Credit: Seamus Daniel, RMIT University.

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