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Sustainability entrepreneurs shine at the 2025 CSC Finals

Sustainability entrepreneurs shine at the 2025 CSC Finals

The Colorado Sustainability Challenge (CSC) concluded on Oct. 12 with the top five finalist teams sharing their sustainability solutions, pitching to the audience and a panel of judges and receiving $21,000 in awards. During the two weeks leading up to the Finals, students, faculty and staff at seven Colorado Front Range colleges and universities vied for a chance to make their mark on Colorado鈥檚 growing innovation ecosystem.

Bounty Project* offers opportunity for innovation

This year, CSC participants were offered a unique opportunity: to take on a Bounty Project and help an organization address one of its current challenges. 探花视频 student Owen Parker () stepped up and received $4,000 for creating a web app to help Abundant Ground, a congregational land initiative program through Mile High Ministries, address affordable housing.

* A Bounty Project is a clearly defined initiative with funding allocated by a particular sponsor.

The CSC Finals kicked off with inspiring remarks from Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, who shared three fronts for combatting climate change: the importance of sustainability, interdisciplinary teams and innovation. Weiser reminded the audience that in challenging times, it鈥檚 important to take initiative.

鈥淭hink about what we can do in Colorado to meet the moment鈥攈ow we operate sustainably, how we meet the challenges of climate change,鈥 he counseled. 鈥淎nd as you work together on your teams鈥ou will be preparing for more effective work and, whether or not the initial innovations you work on succeed, you鈥檒l learn something and you鈥檒l try something else.鈥

Uniting to solve problems

Hosted by 探花视频鈥檚 Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative, Leeds School of Business and the Environmental Center,听CSC is a two-week hackathon-style event designed for anyone passionate about solving problems, teaming up on an idea and having fun in the process of building a solution to impact sustainability.

Throughout the 336-hour challenge, teams collaborated, prototyped and pitched their ideas for a more sustainable future. In addition to 探花视频, Affiliate schools included Colorado School of Mines, CSU College of Business, University of Denver, Front Range Community College, Regis University and the University of Colorado Denver.

鈥淭he energy around this event is contagious,鈥 said Stan Hickory, director of 探花视频's Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just a competition鈥攊t鈥檚 a celebration of what happens when bright minds unite to solve real problems.鈥

Hickory explained that this year鈥檚 teams tackled everything from sustainable food production and renewable energy to sustainable transportation and preventing food waste, adding, 鈥淚t鈥檚 proof that innovation and sustainability go hand in hand鈥攁nd that Colorado鈥檚 next generation is ready to lead.鈥

Creatively addressing sustainability

During their pitches, the five finalist teams elaborated on their approaches for the judging panel, who followed up with a Q&A.听Judges for the CSC Finals included Laura Hickernell, executive director of Colorado Cleantech, Michael MacHarg,听senior advisor, anticipatory action accelerator for Mercy Corps Ventures, Chris Westfall, founder and chief partner officer of Banimo and Katie Woslager, program manager for the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

BioOX took the top prize of $5,000 for a proprietary processing system that transforms raw biochar (a charcoal-like material produced from wood waste) into a dense, pelletized form for use by farmers.

鈥淲e are developing processing equipment to make production cheaper as well as products easier to apply and more effective than current solutions,鈥澨齭aid BioOX team member Jack Mulvaney. 鈥淲inning the Colorado Sustainability Challenge was an incredible payoff for the time and effort we鈥檝e invested. It鈥檚 also meaningful validation of our vision and the impact we鈥檙e working to create.鈥

Four runner-up teams each received $2,000 for their creative solutions: Amply, for merging residential power storage with real-time AI workloads; MyPack, for developing mycelium-based packing materials; Owen Parker, for developing an app that helps find unused church land for affordable housing; and Uplink Energy, for an innovative use of听thermal cooling battery packs to reduce lost energy in modern buildings.

After observing the teams in action, the audience jumped in, voting for Uplink Energy as the winner of the $1,000 Audience Choice Award. Additional prize categories included best use of technology ($2,000); two 1000 Gretas awards ($500 each) for comprehensive solutions that address a听real, urgent sustainability or climate challenge; and a $4,000听Bounty Prize sponsored by Abundant Ground, for work on an app for new development of underutilized land and buildings.

Statewide Solutions

CSC evolved out of the 探花视频听Sustainability Hackathon, which started as a way for students to learn design thinking and gain agile development skills.听Members of the 探花视频 community joined in, helping support the Sustainability Hackathon through financial and in-kind sponsorships and offering time and talent as workshop leaders, mentors or competition judges.听This year, the competition was rebranded as CSC, opened up to Colorado Front Range colleges and universities and expanded to two weeks in duration.

CSC is a hybrid event open to participants from all academic disciplines鈥攔anging from the Humanities to STEM鈥攁nd offers workshops, mentoring, pitch sessions and the chance to work alongside industry experts.

鈥淐SC showcases the power of cross-state collaboration,鈥 said Lesley Robinson,听associate director for the Institute for Entrepreneurship at Colorado State University. 鈥淥pportunities like CSC also redefine what zero-barrier entrepreneurship means at the student level鈥攚here every learner, no matter where they study, is empowered to engage, contribute and lead meaningful, sustainable change.鈥

CSC drew the attention of students who wouldn鈥檛 normally participate in a business pitch or plan competition, explained Ken Sagendorf, director of The Innovation Center at Regis University. "CSC was a fantastic opportunity for our students, and when I got to personally work with them on their ideas, the passion they have for making their 鈥榠deals into real鈥 is the essence of what we do at a university," he said.

Participants agreed.听鈥淭he way the entire process was set up was so helpful for my team to really lay out our why behind our project,鈥 said Kaydence Brown, a student from CSU. 鈥淎lthough our idea was not tech related, we focused primarily on the sustainability and longevity of a student organization here on our campus that supports entrepreneurial growth鈥.This challenge pushed my group beyond the limits we once thought we had.鈥

Fellow CSU student听Daniel Ortiz concurred. 鈥淭he program provides great resources and constant feedback in every area. The mentoring encouraged me to network and connect with entrepreneurs around Fort Collins,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 ended up receiving several business cards from people willing to help and was motivated to find advisors and conduct real surveys on campus. Overall, it鈥檚 been an incredible learning experience.鈥

Next up: the New Venture Challenge

CSC is a springboard to the New Venture Challenge (NVC). A signature program of the Innovation & Entrepreneurship Initiative鈥擭VC is a launchpad for aspiring problem-solvers and creatives. NVC startup teams pitch for hundreds of thousands of dollars in funding and attend year-round events鈥攕uch as CSC鈥攚hile networking and collaborating with mentors to refine ideas. Registration for the 2026 New Venture Challenge opens on Nov. 18, and the NVC Finals are on April 22.听Learn more about NVC.

Looking ahead

While CSC happens once a year, there are plenty of opportunities to ignite innovation and creativity. Stay up to date on details, events and programs, and learn more about supporting real-world impact and problem-solving by joining the听.

2025 Colorado Sustainability Challenge Winning Teams

2025 Colorado Sustainability Challenge winning teams holding their big checks

First Place ($5,000): BioOX

Runner-up ($2,000): Amply

  • Solution: A system that merges residential power storage with real-time AI workloads, creating a smarter, more profitable grid and turning houses into profitable micro鈥揹ata centers.
  • Team members:听探花视频 students Neil Vaidya, Liam Zirkle (), Sam Siegal () and Walter Richard ()

Runner-up ($2,000): MyPack

  • Solution: Packing materials made from mycelium (fungus roots and compost waste)
  • Team members:听Shodan D鈥橲ouza (), Gabrielle Kellogg () and Jordan Rule ()

Runner-up ($2,000): Owen Parker

  • Solution: A centralized web app that automates the process of finding viable, unused church land that can be converted into affordable housing
  • Team Member: Owen Parker ()

Runner-up ($2,000): Uplink Energy

Additional Awards

Row of lightbulbs

Abundant Ground Bounty Project* ($4,000): Owen Parker

  • Solution: A centralized web app that automates the process of finding viable, unused church land that can be converted into affordable housing.
  • Team Member: Owen Parker ()
  • 探花视频 the project sponsor: Abundant Ground is a congregational land initiative program through Mile High Ministries, that supports the vitality of local congregations by helping them imagine and implement mission-aligned new development of underutilized land and buildings.
    * A Bounty Project is a clearly defined initiative with funding allocated by a particular sponsor.

1000 Gretas Prize ($500): CleanRoute

  • Solution: An app that integrates real-time air, heat, traffic and shade data for cleaner commutes and a reduction in the carbon footprint.
  • Team Member: Rishab Pally (College of Engineering and Applied Science)
  • 探花视频 the award sponsor:听1000 Gretas听is a nonprofit supporting innovation focused on climate solutions, sustainability and green technology.

1000 Gretas Prize ($500): Uplink Energy

Audience Choice Award ($1,000): Uplink Energy

Best Technology Award* ($2,000):听Circular Materials Marketplace

  • Solution: Turning听campus waste into opportunity 鈥 post, claim, and reuse surplus materials across 探花视频.
  • Team Member: Diyora Daminova (College of Engineering and Applied Science)
  • *Selected for the best use of technology in the solution

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