June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
two dairy cows walking toward camera with barn in background

Livestock agriculture is bearing the cost of extreme weather events. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign explores how heat stress affects U.S. dairy production, finding that high heat and humidity lead to a 1% decline in annual milk yield. Small farms are hit harder than large farms, which may be able to mitigate some of the effects through management strategies.

Read more in this ACES News Release...

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
woman bringing bucket to feed group of goats

Globally, women’s workforce participation is about 25% lower than men’s, often due to barriers such as domestic responsibilities and cultural norms. Vocational training can increase employment opportunities, but women may not be able to attend training programs that require them to be away from home. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, in collaboration with an international research team, explored whether hybrid distance learning can improve accessibility to job training for rural women in Nepal.

Read more in this ACES News Release... 

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
Shadi Atallah smiling for a photo in front of a chalkboard

Many U.S. forests are privately owned, particularly in the Eastern and North Central part of the country. This makes control of invasive plants and pests challenging because efforts must be coordinated across landowners. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign explores how differences in ownership motivation affects willingness to control, and how economic incentives can be implemented most efficiently.

Read more in this ACES News Release...

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
highway traffic backed up

Ever notice how much more tempting it is to pick up fast food for dinner after being stuck in traffic? It’s not just you. New University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign research shows that traffic delays significantly increase visits to fast food restaurants, leading to unhealthier eating for millions each year. 

Read more in this ACES News Release...

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
angela kent headshot

The U.S. Department of Energy Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E) has announced $5 million in funding to the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and partner institutions to develop a new variety of corn called NSave that will reduce nitrogen fertilizer use and greenhouse gas emissions while maintaining crop yield.

Read the full release at aces.illinois.edu/news... 

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
Diego Cardoso

Last month, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) published their 2024 Water Affordability Needs Assessment Report. Research from professor Diego Cardoso played a pivotal role in shaping the EPA's Water Affordability Needs Assessment report to Congress, which found that 12.1-19.2 million U.S. households lack affordable water access. The EPA incorporated novel methods for household-level affordability analysis developed by Diego Cardoso and Casey Wichman as well as their published dataset and procedures for matching water rates to census demographic data. Based on this analysis, the EPA recommends establishing a federal water assistance program to help alleviate the financial burden faced by households and utilities nationwide.

Read more on the EPA's Water Affordability website... 

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
An agricultural robot pulls hoes across the soil between rows of corn.

Most corn and soybean fields in the U.S. are planted with herbicide-resistant crop varieties. However, the evolution of superweeds that have developed resistance to common herbicides is jeopardizing current weed management strategies. Agricultural robotics for mechanical weeding is an emerging technology that could potentially provide a solution. A new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign looks at the types of farmers and fields more likely to adopt weeding robots and at what stage of resistance development.

Read more in this ACES News Release...

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
madhu khanna smiling for a photo in the middle of tall grasses

Conventional food and agricultural production systems employ a linear “take, make, waste” approach: taking natural resources from the Earth to make food and fuel, generating waste that contaminates the soil and water, and emitting harmful pollutants.

More recently, a new model of production is gaining traction in the scientific and business community: a “circular bioeconomy” that reduces and recycles waste, transitions away from fossil fuels to renewable bio-based alternatives, and regenerates natural systems. This approach is critical for feeding and fueling the world’s growing population in environmentally sustainable ways.

Read more in this ACES News Release...

June 10, 2026
4:26 AM
two male headshots side by side. Left: Shadi Atallah, Right: Andrew Margenot

ACES professors Shadi Atallah and Andrew Margenot are among 15 Illinois faculty selected for the 2024-25 Emerging Research Leaders Academy by the Interdisciplinary Health Sciences Institute. Designed for mid-career faculty to achieve research success, the program provides vital leadership and team science training to pursue large, multi-PI grants, lead campus research initiatives, enhance their own research programs, and ultimately position Illinois for research excellence.

Read more in this ACES News Release...