E.P.A. Awards $800,000 to Michigan State University to Research Effects of Chemical Exposure on Ecosystems
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Category: Grants and AwardsType: News
Source: EPA
Date: Tuesday, August 11th, 2015
(CHICAGO) August 11, 2015-- Today, the E.P.A. (EPA) announced an $800,000 grant to Michigan State University to study the ecological impacts of manufactured chemicals. This STAR (Science to Achieve Results) grant is part of EPA's Chemical Safety for Sustainability research plan to develop new methods to enhance chemical evaluation and support environmental sustainability.
Michigan State University in East Lansing will use the STAR grant to develop an adverse outcome pathway for neurological function in fish that can be used to predict effects of chemicals.
"This innovative research will provide new approaches to evaluate how chemicals influence the health of ecological systems. These approaches can help predict and, more importantly, prevent chemical impacts," said Thomas A. Burke, EPA's Science Advisor and Deputy Assistant Administrator of EPA's Office of Research and Development. "This knowledge will help us more effectively protect the environment from adverse impacts of chemicals over time."
University of California, Santa Barbara, Harvard University, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, Oregon State University and Texas Tech University also received E.P.A. STAR grants to better understand and predict the biological and ecological consequences of exposures to chemicals in the environment.
To learn more about the STAR grants: http://www.epa.gov/ncer/2014ecoimpacts
For more information on Chemical Safety for Sustainability research: http://www2.epa.gov/chemical-research
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