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DASHBOARD: CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY
PermID | 4296508773 |
Website | https://www.concordia.ca/ |
Industry | University |
Address | 2811 NE Holman St Portland, OR, 97211-6099 United States |
ACTIVITIES:
Concordia University is located in Portland, OR, United States and is part of the Colleges & Universities Industry. Concordia University has 180 total employees across all of its locations and generates $112.92 million in sales (USD). There are 5 companies in the Concordia University corporate family.
+ CONCORDIA UNIVERSITY [1 Press Release]
+ CONCORDIA'S BRUNO LEE LOOKS TO RETROFIT THE FUTURE OF REAL ESTATE
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) recently awarded Bruno Lee, associate professor in building, civil and environmental engineering at Concordia, $630,000 over three years for an ambitious new research project. The grant further underlines the university's institutional commitment to helping Canada meet its goal of carbon emission neutrality by 2050.
Lee will partner with JLL, a global commercial real estate and investment management company founded in the United Kingdom. Together they will develop a multidisciplinary decarbonization framework to revamp existing commercial buildings so they use less energy, thus decreasing total emissions.
Funding will be provided for up to six PhD students to work alongside JLL to carry out the project. Smiling man with close-cropped, dark hair and wearing a mauve dress shirt.
Source: Company Website
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+ AALTO UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING [22 Press Releases]
+ AALTO UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING: A FINER PICTURE OF GLOBAL MIGRATION REVEALS COMPLEX PATTERNS
New research shows that socio-economic factors play a larger role than climate A map with regions of countries colour-coded to show net migration levels. There's a lot of variability, and many countries have some subregions with positive net migration and other subregions with negative net migration. A map showing net migration (recorded population change minus natural growth), with blue showing areas of positive net migration and red showing negative net migration. Image: Matti Kummu/Aalto University
While public discussions often focus on climate change driving people to emigrate, new research published in Nature Human Behaviour shows that net-migration patterns around the world are actually more strongly linked with socio-economic factors. The study also provides a new, high-resolution dataset of net-migration over the past two decades to inform policy-making and fuel further research.
'Our findings don't really match the...