Originally published on Sustainability Magazine

T-Mobile operates with 100% renewably purchased electricity. Here is how it commits to a more environmentally and socially responsible approach

With all eyes on the industry’s net zero goals, businesses across all areas of the telco sector are working to lessen their impact on the environment.

As of last year, 50 global operators had pledged to reduce their carbon footprint over a ten-year period, according to the Global System for Mobile communications Association’s (GSMA) Mobile Net Zero report. Additionally, operators making up 44% of global telecom revenue committed to net-zero targets by 2050.

And T-Mobile is no different in tackling its environmental incentives head on. With renewable energy sources like solar and wind power producing no carbon emissions as part of the electricity generation process, T-Mobile is taking giant leaps towards a greener future.

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COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., July 27, 2023 /3BL/– KeyBank, a Fortune 500 company with regional headquarters in Denver, has selected Colorado Springs for its first new branch in Colorado in over a decade. Bank leaders and employees will hold a grand opening celebration July 28-29.

This new, full-service branch is located at 27 Spectrum Loop. Construction was completed in June and doors opened to the public on June 26. Grand opening festivities are as follows:

July 28, 11:00 a.m.- 1:00 p.m. Local business owners and community members are welcome to stop by and meet the KeyBank team. Ribbon cutting ceremony at 11:15 a.m.July 29, 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Family friendly activities with food trucks, giveaways, prizes, and much more including a meet and greet with Avs player Samuel Girard from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m.

To commemorate the new Northgate neighborhood branch opening, KeyBank will also be investing in two local nonprofit groups. Tri Lakes Cares and Mt. Carmel Veteran’s Center will each receive a $10,000 donation from Key to further their missions to help the Colorado Springs community.

“We are excited about the opportunity this new branch provides for us to become an integral part of the community in the Springs,” said Michael Katz, KeyBank’s Colorado market president. “Colorado Springs is a wonderful place to live, work and even start a business. This new location is our fifth branch here, and highlights Key’s continued investment in Colorado. We are excited to work more closely with our neighbors, clients and community partners.”

The new branch will highlight KeyBank’s state of the art financial wellness center model, which is staffed with financial wellness consultants rather than a traditional teller line. All transactions will be completed at desks, where consultants will also conduct comprehensive financial wellness reviews and discussions. Clients can also meet with specialists in mortgage, investments, business banking and more at the new location.

In addition to high-touch banking services, the new branch will feature digital video screens and a client hospitality area that can double as an area for financial seminars and group presentations with clients and the public, as well as a drive-up teller line, ATM and free parking.

“KeyBank’s financial wellness centers are uniquely designed to give our clients a more personal banking experience, with even better access to a full suite of products and services,” said Jon Munro, Regional Retail Leader for KeyBank. “This model has been well received across the KeyBank footprint, and we are excited to bring this more consultative approach to the Northgate neighborhood and demonstrate our commitment to helping our clients move forward on their financial journey. The advice our bankers provide is our most valuable asset and we cannot wait for the community to get to know them and reach their financial goals.”

CONTACT: 

Laura Suter | Regional Communications Manager | 206.551.9000 | laura_suter@keybank.com

ABOUT KEYBANK

KeyCorp’s roots trace back nearly 200 years to Albany, New York. Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, Key is one of the nation’s largest bank-based financial services companies, with assets of approximately $198 billion at March 31, 2023. Key provides deposit, lending, cash management, and investment services to individuals and businesses in 15 states under the name KeyBank National Association through a network of approximately 1,000 branches and approximately 1,300 ATMs. Key also provides a broad range of sophisticated corporate and investment banking products, such as merger and acquisition advice, public and private debt and equity, syndications and derivatives to middle market companies in selected industries throughout the United States under the KeyBanc Capital Markets trade name. For more information, visit https://www.key.com/. KeyBank is Member FDIC.

 

MELBOURNE, Australia, July 27, 2023 /3BL/ – Black & Veatch, a global leader in critical infrastructure solutions, has joined Bioenergy Australia’s (BA) Sustainable Aviation Fuel Alliance of Australia and New Zealand (SAFAANZ).

BA is a national industry association, with over 150 members, committed to accelerating Australia’s bio-economy. BA founded the SAFAANZ to create a collaborative environment to advance SAF production, policy, education and marketing in Australia and New Zealand.

Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) is produced by processing renewable sources such as waste cooking oil, plant oils and agricultural residues for use in commercial airplanes. The fuel can reduce greenhouse gas emissions by up to 80 percent compared to traditional jet fuel.

“Electrification is essential for many pillars of the energy system. Yet, it is only part of the solution to reducing emissions. Australia’s heavy industries, aviation, marine, agriculture and mining need affordable and immediate decarbonisation options, such as renewable fuel. We are excited to work with industry leaders, like Black & Veatch, to identify pathways to produce the fuel affordably and at scale,’’ Bioenergy Australia CEO Shahana McKenzie said.

“As well as decarbonising the aviation sector, sustainable fuels will decarbonise all transportation forms – people and goods. Joining SAFAANZ means Black & Veatch can meaningfully contribute to the advancement of sustainable fuels in Australia and New Zealand, given our extensive global engineering and construction experience across aviation fuel, methanol to gasoline, biogas and renewable natural gas,” said Mick Scrivens, Vice President, Director, Australia Pacific, Black & Veatch.

About 2.5 percent of the world’s total carbon emissions are generated by the global aviation sector. In Australia, the industry accounts for about 1 percent of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) estimates that SAF could contribute around 65 percent of the reduction in emissions needed by aviation to reach net zero in 2050.

Presently, demand for SAF exceeds its supply. Australia, with abundant residue resources, agriculture and waste, has strong potential to meet both domestic and global SAF supply needs.

To realize its potential, the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) set aside $30 million (US$20 million) in July to facilitate the development of a SAF industry with production from renewable feedstocks available locally. The Sustainable Aviation Fuels Funding Initiative will assess opportunities across the supply chain from renewable feedstock supply to final fuel production, identifying their requirements to enable and scale a domestic SAF industry.

The wider deployment of SAF will be supported by overcoming barriers, including affordability, competition for feedstocks, sustainability, airport infrastructure and cost-effective scaling of production.

Contact Black & Veatch for more information.

***

Editor’s Notes: 

Black & Veatch and DG Fuels LLC – an emerging leader in cellulosic drop-in sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) – have signed and begun a binding agreement for Black & Veatch to perform a front-end loading (FEL-3) engineering report for DG Fuels’ launch project to be located in Louisiana, United States. The report involving a possible low-emission fuel manufacturing facility in St. James Parish along the Mississippi River is expected to be completed in eight to nine months, consistent with Washington, D.C.-based DG Fuels’ goal of reaching a final investment decision (FID) on the project in early 2024.

About Black & Veatch 
Black & Veatch is a 100-percent employee-owned global engineering, procurement, consulting and construction company with a more than 100-year track record of innovation in sustainable infrastructure. Since 1915, we have helped our clients improve the lives of people around the world by addressing the resilience and reliability of our most important infrastructure assets. Our revenues in 2022 were US$4.3 billion. Follow us on www.bv.com and on social media.

Media Contact, Black & Veatch:

EMILY CHIA | +65 6335 6623 P | +65 9875 8907 M | Chialp@bv.com

24-HOUR MEDIA EMAIL | Media@bv.com

About Bioenergy Australia 

Bioenergy Australia (BA) is the national industry association, with over 150 members, committed to accelerating Australia’s bio-economy. Our mission is to foster the bioenergy sector to generate jobs, secure investment, maximise the value of local resources, minimise waste and environmental impact, and develop and promote national bioenergy expertise into international markets.

Bioenergy Australia works with the Renewable Gas Alliance (RGA), Sustainable Aviation Fuel Alliance of Australia and New Zealand (SAFAANZ) and the Cleaner Fuels Alliance (CFA). These alliances were founded to accelerate the development and deployment of Renewable Liquid Fuels and Biomethane for deployment in Australia.

Media Contact, Bioenergy Australia:

SHAHANA MCKENZIE | Bioenergy Australia | +61 439 555 764

Ricci Seguban prioritizes making a difference. It’s something she strives for every day as a process safety engineer at the Flint Hills Resources Pine Bend refinery — and why she volunteers with the ZOOMS STEM Design Challenge, an annual program for kids at the Minnesota Zoo.

Charged with finding new ways to manage on-the-job risks throughout the 5,000-acre Flint Hills facility in Rosemount, Minnesota, Ricci spends much of her time talking with colleagues about how they work. The safety and well-being of employees and the surrounding community is priority number one for Ricci and the facility. Her job, she says, is making sure Pine Bend’s more than 1,000 employees leave each day in the same shape as when they arrived.

“My career path isn’t typical for someone with a chemical engineering background,” she says. “But I find a lot of personal fulfillment when I do things that have an impact on people’s lives. That’s what drew me to safety in the first place.”

It’s also what inspired her to sign up for the ZOOMS program in the last three years. Supported and significantly expanded by Flint Hills, ZOOMS invites students to learn more about a specific zoo animal — the endangered Malayan tapir this year — then create detailed designs that reimagine or enrich its exhibit space. A record-breaking 5,200 students in grades three through 12 participated in the 2022–23 challenge, most from Minnesota and some from as far away as Australia.

When several hundred of those students presented their work at the Minnesota Zoo during the ninth annual ZOOMS exhibition week in early March, Ricci was among 20 Flint Hills team members serving as judges. The event, a sort of tapir-themed science fair, featured more than 260 projects. They spanned the gamut from poster-board-mounted drawings to detailed 3D models, including a few constructed entirely from recycled household items and one, by a team from Zimmerman Middle School from Zimmerman, Minnesota, envisioning the tapir habitat as a “resort.” That design included a spa-like river (Malayan tapirs love to swim) lined with cushioned flooring because the 500-pound mammals have sensitive feet. And it earned its creators one of this year’s five Flint Hills Innovation Awards, given for outstanding designs that demonstrate creative problem-solving.

“It’s amazing to see the ideas students come up with,” Ricci says. “You want to help them keep that creativity alive as they get older. Coming up with innovative solutions is something that’s going to be helpful for them in any career.”

This year she was pleased to hear students praise ZOOMS for showing them how skills they learn in the classroom, such as research, critical thinking and problem-solving, can also be applied to real-world problems.

“One team said they now see how the engineering design process can even be used by someone with a career at the zoo,” she says.

That ZOOMS helps students use their math, science and problem-solving skills to address real-life issues has made it a hit among teachers, while kids, of course, are drawn to the cool critters.

“I’ve had former students tell me this project is one of the fondest memories they have of STEM,” says Dawn Coats, STEM specialist at Lakeview Elementary School in Lakeville, Minnesota, where third-grade students have been participating in ZOOMS since 2019.

Studying animals is part of the third-grade science curriculum and adding this STEM-skills-driven challenge to the equation “takes their learning to the next level,” she says.

When creating their projects, the students even practice a kid-friendly version of the engineering design process (identifying a problem, brainstorming solutions, making a plan and adjusting it along the way).

“They care so much about the animals and work hard to create something especially for them,” Dawn says.

Those connections created between young people and animals are an important aspect of ZOOMS, and line up well with the zoo’s mission.

“We want to inspire an interest in STEM and conservation to help students see why STEM knowledge and skills are necessary in the real world,” says Minnesota Zoo STEM specialist Kristi Berg. “We are so incredibly grateful to have Flint Hills Resources partner with us for this program and especially lucky to get to have their engineers connect with students and provide expert feedback. It makes the ZOOMS Design Challenge an even more authentic learning experience for these kids.”

Ricci is aware that her feedback, and her very presence as a woman engineer, can affect these students in defining ways.

“A diverse group of kids and a lot of girls compete in ZOOMS, so it’s important for them to see role models they can relate to,” she says. “Especially when it comes to science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) careers: How can we help them learn more about the opportunities and options? If they see someone who looks like them in an engineering role, they may have the confidence to say, ‘Hey, I can do it, too.’” That’s how it worked for her, anyway. Born just outside Dallas and raised in Gig Harbor, Washington, Ricci was a good student who enjoyed math and science. But she didn’t fully embrace those subjects until seventh grade when she was encouraged to join the mostly male robotics club by the science teacher who was its faculty adviser.

“Seeing a female teacher getting involved in STEM activities made me feel like I could join in,” Ricci says.

Ricci learned about ZOOMS — and volunteered for the program — while she was working for a different Koch company before she moved into her role with Flint Hills in 2021. She’s also taken on a leadership role with the refinery’s employee-led Women’s Network Group and its efforts to promote diverse perspectives in her field of expertise.

“Koch really supports volunteerism and connecting with the community,” she says. “We try to connect what we’ve learned in our careers, and what we see in the work we do, to the students that we work with.”

For Ricci, the rewards of community service stick around long after events like the ZOOMS challenge end. She returns to work feeling inspired and even more inclined to think about problems in new ways. Ricci also takes pride in knowing she’s encouraged the next generation to follow their STEM dreams, just like she did.

“Having the chance to impact students, seeing how the challenge motivates them — I take that satisfaction back into my own career,” she says. “I feel like we’ve achieved something wonderful.”

XI’AN, China, July 27, 2023 /PRNewswire/ — In three recent articles published in the Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis (JPA), researchers utilize novel techniques for unraveling the metabolism and hepatotoxicity of amiodarone in 3D HepG2 spheroids, exploring plasma proteomics and its…

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