Sustainability in Aviation Reclaims Attention as Airlines and Airports Ramp Up Recovery Plans
As the aviation industry slowly recovers from the lasting effects of the pandemic, many organizations are embracing this as a time to think critically about modernization and innovation efforts in their respective lines of business. Sustainability in aviation has long been a topic of interest among industry experts, but it seems that it is becoming an even higher priority among decision makers as they look to revamp their business operations in this industry rebirth of sorts.
To highlight this trend and showcase how major industry players are responding to more concerted calls for sustainable practices, we’ve compiled a few compelling stories in the roundup below. Here’s what’s happening in aviation around the topic of sustainability:
Lytton Alden Kendall was born March 26, 1936, in Minneapolis, Minn., to Lytton A. Kendall and Blanche Lenora Keller. He died of Parkinson’s disease at Evergreen Hospice House in Albany,
Apr 28, 2021
MINNEAPOLIS Lytton Alden Kendall was born March 26, 1936, in Minneapolis, to Lytton A. Kendall and Blanche Lenora Keller. He died of Parkinson’s disease at Evergreen Hospice House in Albany, Oregon, on April 16, 2021.
He graduated from St. Louis Park High School in 1955 and received a BS in mining engineering in 1960 from the University of Minnesota. He worked as an engineer, then earned an M.S. in industrial engineering (Iowa State University) and Ph.D. (Ohio State University). In 1971, he received a Fulbright Fellowship, which took him and his young family to Kandy, Sri Lanka as a professor of industrial engineering at Peradeniya University.
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CHARLOTTE, N.C., Feb. 24, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Flip your calendar back to February 2001. People were still calling the internet the world wide web, we d made it through Y2K, and everyone was throwing around words like information age and digital revolution.
The world would need a steady pipeline of bright minds to keep the big, outside-the-box ideas flowing. It would need
more engineers.
Image from the 2020 Introduce a Girl to Engineering Day event. This year we re going virtual! Photo courtesy: Collins Aerospace
Collins Aerospace Introduce a Girl to Engineering 2021 B-roll
Raytheon Technologies Corporate B-roll
Girl Power! More than 80% of the girls who participated in the 2019 Girl Day event with Collins reported that they are now more likely to consider a career in engineering.