Rawiri Waru - World Champ Environmental Researcher
Rawiri Waru
World Champ
Environmental Researcher
See also… http://www.wyre.org/pandp/NZ.shtml
HONEYBEES AND
HOT SPRINGS YOUNG MAORI RAWIRI WARU IS WINNER
OF THE
FIRST WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FOR YOUNG ENVIRONMENTAL
RESEARCHERS
MEDIA RELEASE FROM WYRE
-----------------------
Hanover, 22 October 2000/News Aktuell-AsiaNet/--Rawiri Waru (18) from Ngongohaha Rotorua, New Zealand is one of the seven very best young environmental scientists in the world. At the Worlwide Young Researchers for the Environment (WYRE) competition, staged at the world exhibition Expo 2000 in Hanover, Germany, the two Canadian students were awarded top honors by a Jury of twelve well-known international scientists for his research addressing key issues about New Zealand's geothermal geysers.
Together with 142 other young people from 73
different countries, Rawiri Waru was invited by Stiftung
Jugend Foundation and Deutsche Bank to the Expo in Hanover.
Rawiri, along with 5 other young researchers from Canada,
Finland and the United States are winners of the first WYRE
competition . The
prizes were presented at a Grand Awards
ceremony including Edelgard Bulmahn, Federal German Minister
of Education and Research, and Dr. Rolf E. Breuer, CEO of
Deutsche Bank AG.
The winning projects were a plethora of innovation including: an environmentally safe technique of exterminating a parasite harmful to honeybees, improvement for public water purification plants, an environmentally sound, a biological herbicide disposal method and a new technique for aquatic research.
In
addition to the five Grand Awards (2,000 Euro each), other
major prizes presented include eleven invitations to the
WYRE-Research Camp 2001 at Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution near Boston (USA). International corporations
are sponsoring 23 internships. The Youth-Jury, consisting of
former prize-winners from the preceding Europe-wide
competitions awarded a cash
prize for the most original
project - a device that makes usable water out of fog in the
Namibian desert.
As recognition for their outstanding commitment, all 143 young researchers are now invited on a week-long tour of Germany.
ENDS