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Virginia Tech Leads $11.6 Million Project to Store Carbon Beneath Roanoke Valley
Project CARDINAL Virginia Tech has been chosen by the Office of Fossil Energy and Carbon Management of the U.S. Department of Energy to oversee a significant feasibility study for the creation of a regional carbon dioxide storage facility in the Roanoke Valley of Virginia. Over the course of the next three decades, the project, called Project CARDINAL, aims to stop an estimated 50 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere. Project Cardinal: Geologic C
Sahithi Sarva
Apr 253 min read


Engineering a Circular Future for Plastic Waste
The Problem Each year, the world produces more than 380 million tons of plastic. Most of it is used just once, then thrown away. Grocery bags, food packaging, shipping materials, and containers made from polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) account for nearly 60% of all plastics produced, but only a small fraction is effectively recycled. The most common approach of recycling, mechanical recycling, gradually lowers the quality of plastic each time it is reused. Eventuall
John Cabrera ('28)
Apr 254 min read


Engineering the Future of Virginia Tech with GIFT
The Team The Giving Innovative Futures with Technology team, better known as GIFT, is helping engineer a better future for Virginia Tech. GIFT is a community service-oriented design team, similar to a think tank. The members look for technical problems around campus and work to engineer solutions. It was founded in the spring of 2025 by Jia Xi Lin, Alexander Ibacache, and Jamie Christen Osmeña. It has since grown to around sixty active members, with a very promising project
Annabell Koehler (‘28)
Apr 253 min read


A Blueprint to Becoming an Inventor
My first introduction to engineering... as a profession was through tales of career inventors and innovators, developing technologies, and subsequently the companies they developed into global empires. Think Henry Ford, with the modern vehicle production line, or Edwin Land, the inventor of the Polaroid. For as long as I can remember, I wanted to become a mechanical engineer because I dreamt of one day inventing a product that would be sold on the mass market. As a Virginia
Mircea Nemes (‘29)
Apr 253 min read
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