PEOPLE

Video featuring Williams’ research gets Emmy nod

By Staff
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“Water: A Zero Sum Game,” a five-minute video produced by the Office for University Outreach’s Learn More About Climate Initiative at CU-Boulder, has been nominated for an Emmy Award by the Heartland Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

The video investigates how climate change is threatening Western water resources. The video highlights research conducted by Mark Williams, CU-Boulder professor of geography and fellow at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research. Williams, an expert in snow hydrology and mountain ecology, studies the storage and release of water from snowpack into mountain streams and what percentage of that water ultimately makes its way into homes and municipalities.

As principal investigator of the Niwot Ridge Long-Term Ecological Research program at CU-Boulder’s Mountain Research Station, Williams and his team also explore the effects of climate change, groundwater storage and pollution recorded at the research site above 10,000 feet in the mountains near Boulder. The National Science Foundation funds the Niwot Ridge Long-Term Ecological Research project.

“Water: A Zero Sum Game” is the latest in a series of videos produced by the Office for University Outreach and hosted at http://learnmoreaboutclimate.org. The Learn More About Climate Initiative seeks to provide educators, policy makers and citizens with the most up-to-date scientific research in a user-friendly way to raise awareness and inspire an informed dialogue about climate change.

Winners of the awards for excellence in television and media production will be announced Saturday at the Heartland Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ 27th Annual Emmy Awards Show and Silver Circle Presentations in the Seawall Grand Ballroom at the Denver Center for the Performing Arts.

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