2004 SJWP US Winner
For Immediate
Release
June 12, 2004
Contact: Lori Burkhammer
1(703)
684-2480
OKLAHOMA HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT TO REPRESENT U.S. IN
INTERNATIONAL STOCKHOLM JUNIOR WATER PRIZE COMPETITION
(Alexandria, VA) - Brandon Fimple, of Vinita,
Oklahoma, has been named the U.S. winner of the Stockholm Junior Water Prize. He
will compete in the only international competition to recognize students for
excellence in water science research. The student from Vinita High School
studied "The Effects of Salicylic Acid Treated Poultry Litter on Forage
Production, Run-off Water Phosphate Levels, and Closterium Algae Growth." His
research was selected from a pool of over 40 state SJWP winners at the national
competition in Denver, Colorado, June 10-12.
The U.S. competition is
organized by the Water Environment Federation (WEF) and its member associations,
with support from ITT Industries and The Coca-Cola Company. ITT Industries is
also the international sponsor.
According to Fimple's abstract,
eutrophication resulting from phosphate pollution is one of the most costly
water quality problems in North America today. Agricultural practices contribute
much of the non-point sources of nitrate and phosphate pollution in surface and
ground waters. Research to develop ways of reducing phosphate pollution in
watersheds is vital due to the increasing number of confined animal feeding
operations that produce large quantities of animal waste that must be disposed
of in environmentally-sound manner. Fimple's experiment combined three years of
research on allelochemicals with a previous study of alum-treated poultry litter
in an effort to find an environmentally protective litter treatment with
effective algaecide properties. The purpose of his experiment was to evaluate
the effects of poultry litter fertilizer treated with salicylic acid on forage
production and run-off water phosphate levels and to determine if Closterium
algae growth in run-off water was adversely affected.
"Fimple's study was
very timely and relevant to issues of immediate concern within the water quality
community," said WEF Nomination Chair Dr. Charles Sorber. His
research and documentation were well conceived and efficiently
executed."
Fimple was awarded $2,500 and an all-expense paid trip to
Stockholm where he will compete in August against winners of 28 national
competitions for the international honor.
Today's youth are indeed
tomorrow's leaders and must be encouraged to pursue water-related careers or
risk further erosion of our scarce supply," said Bjorn von
Euler, Director of Corporate Communications, ITT Industries. "The
Stockholm Junior Water Prize helps meet that objective and is the reason ITT
Industries has been a proud sponsor since its inception as an international
competition eight years ago."
The winner of the international competition
will be chosen based on the quality and relevance of the student's project. HRH
Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden will bestow the prize on August 20 during a
ceremony held in conjunction with the Stockholm Water Symposium. The laureate
will receive a $5,000 scholarship and a crystal sculpture.
Three U.S.
finalists were also awarded $500 each. They include Balaji Sridhar, Denver,
Colorado; Abigail Hines, Fort Wayne, Indiana; and Elizabeth Welsh, Proctor,
Minnesota.
2004 SJWP Winner and Finalists Abstracts