Departments



Articles

Less

News: G Street Storm Drain Project
October 13th, 2005

News: Refuge Staff Members Help in Relief Effort
October 12th, 2005

News: Flu Shots "Popular"
October 11th, 2005

News: Annexation Trial Balloon
October 5th, 2005

News: Water Treatment Test Underway
September 28th, 2005

News: Rains Brothers Acquitted of Poaching
September 27th, 2005

News: Local Humane Society Aids Katrina Animals
September 20th, 2005

News: City Prepares for Possible Lawsuit
September 16th, 2005

News: Decision on Downtown Project Delayed
September 16th, 2005

News: Commission Appoints Chief
September 7th, 2005

News: Dolphin Aids Rescue
September 7th, 2005

News: CRA Directorship Offer Accepted
September 1st, 2005

News: Chief Swogger to Leave Cedar Key
September 1st, 2005

News: Katrina in Cedar Key Update
August 30th, 2005

News: Music at the Dock Street Depot
August 30th, 2005

More

Walters Receives Volvo Environment Prize

Walters Receives Volvo Environment Prize

By Sandra Buckingham


Carl Walters (r) receives the Volvo Environment Prize

The Volvo Environment Prize award was handed over to the Laureates, Prof. Ray Hilborn, Prof. Daniel Pauly and Prof. Carl Walters at the Concert Hall in Stockholm, Sweden on Oct. 26, 2006 by Ms. Maud Olofsson, Swedish Minister of Industry, Mr. Leif Johansson, CEO and President of the Volvo Group and Mr. Fredrik Arp, President and CEO of Volvo Car Corporation. Photo by Sandra Buckingham.


When Carl Walters isn`t busy pounding out mathematical models on his laptop or teaching the finer points of adaptive management to graduate fisheries students, he can usually be found fishing from his blue kayak on the waters behind his house in Cedar Key.

Late October, however, was extraordinarily different. He was in Sweden, on the stage of the Stockholm Concert House, accepting the Volvo Environment Prize for 2006, along with two other colleagues from the U.S. and Canada.

This prize was established to support and recognize environmental research and development. Since its establishment in 1988 it has gained the status of one of the world`s most prestigious environmental prizes.

The prize committee cited Carl for his "brilliant analyses of fishery stocks and harvest management and his seminal writings about adaptive management now widely used by ecologists, other scientists and managers throughout the world".


The Swedes honored the three laureates and their families with a weeklong series of events in Gothenburg and Stockholm, highlighted by dinner in the foyer of the Nobel Museum and a large banquet in the courtyard of the National Museum.

Click for printer friendly version

Email this article to a friend

 

 

© 2013
Cedar Key News

cedarkeynews@gmail.com