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Global ecosystems are undergoing unprecedented transformations driven by the rising demand for water, energy, and critical minerals. These changes are rapidly altering the Earth system, including land, air, and water, and influencing human systems, such as public health, epigenetics, migration, politics. A growing wealth of observational data from satellites, sensor networks, foundation models, gridded weather and reanalysis, socio-economic databases, and other multi-scale technologies is enabling a higher-fidelity view of the Earth system than ever before. Combing this ever-expanding ecosystem of data with advanced computational techniques, particularly the ethical and sustainable use of AI, is of high priority. The University of Utah, under the leadership of the One-Utah Responsible AI Initiative (One-U RAI,https://rai.utah.edu/), is building a new group to address a broad range of environmental challenges and opportunities created by AI by leveraging, integrating and enhancing existing strengths in earth and environmental science, biological science,

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Description

The Fariborz Maseeh Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering (CAEE) at The University of Texas at Austin invites applications for a tenure-track assistant professor position in in riverine and coastal systems.  We seek a candidate whose research addresses critical challenges in hydrology, flood prediction, coastal and hurricane-related physical processes, and/or the impacts of extreme weather events, including protection strategies. Emphasis will be placed on research involving field studies (including remote sensing) and/or laboratory experiments. The successful candidate will show potential for interdisciplinary collaboration within the department, across campus, and with national and international partners.

We are committed to supporting the success of all members of our community: students, staff, and faculty.  A successful candidate can expect to benefit from and contribute to those efforts.

Qualifications

Candidates must have a PhD in engineering or a related area. The successful candidate will be expected

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The Department of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Wisconsin-Madison seeks to fill two tenure-track positions at all ranks with a distinguished academic record and exceptional potential for innovative research in biomedical engineering. Additionally, a candidate whose research in their fields complements the department’s existing strengths in Tissue Engineering/Biomaterials, Cellular Engineering, Neuroengineering, Biomechanics, Biomedical imaging and optics, and Medical Micro technologies would be of particular interest.  The candidate’s research should have clear implications for improving human health.  The ideal candidate will be interested in collaborative work with existing centers and faculty in the Department of Biomedical Engineering and throughout campus.

Additional Information:
The Department of Biomedical Engineering in the College of Engineering at UW-Madison enrolls approximately 700 undergraduate students and 120 MS and PhD graduate students from all over the world. The Department has 24 Primary Faculty, 62 Affiliate Faculty, 5 Teaching Faculty, 3 Emeritus

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In-brief analysis

October 9, 2025

We estimate crude oil inventories in China increased by about 900,000 barrels per day (b/d) between January and August this year, essentially acting as a source of demand by removing barrels from the global markets. The stock builds in China limited the downward price pressure we would otherwise expect to see with growing inventories, keeping the Brent crude oil spot prices in a relatively tight range around $68 per barrel (b) in the second and third quarters of 2025.

We estimate global petroleum inventories rose by an average of 1.8 million b/d in the second and third quarters in our October Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO). Global oil inventories have been growing in 2025 as crude oil production from OPEC+ members and non-OPEC+ producers in North and South America has outpaced global demand

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