Mar
05
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
On February 7th, on the eve of Professors Moomaw and Everett taking the stage to debate climate change and energy issues, Fletcher held its first annual student pre-debate on energy issues. Tufts Energy Conference chair and Fletcher GREEN co-chair Katie Walsh squared off against Fletcher Energy Consortium’s Kartik Misra to debate benefits and dangers of the Keystone XL pipeline, which recently had its permit denied by President Obama. For more coverage of the debate, see the coverage here.
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Obama cited environmental concerns as a reason for denying the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline. Opponents have argued that, in attempting to postpone the decision, he was putting politics ahead of the national interest. What do you think? Is a concern over the lifecycle emissions of oil from Alberta’s oil sands a valid criterion for decision-making, in the absence of federal legislation governing greenhouse gases? Should these and other unconventional resources be developed?
Mar
04
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
This Harvard Business Review article argues that the United States is losing its important advantage in clean energy, an advantage which it has enjoyed over several years.
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What do you think? Should the United States be using policy to attempt to defend its strong position in the world of clean energy? How important is it for this country to develop/maintain a strong clean energy manufacturing industry?
?
Feb
29
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
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Finding secure, safe and reliable sources of energy to power world economic growth will be one of the great challenges of this century. The Harvard University Center for the Environment invites the Harvard community to take up the challenge by participating in this ongoing series of discussions.
THE FUTURE OF ENERGY
Carl Pope, Former Chairman, Sierra Club
“Bringing Back America: How reviving our manufacturing sector is the big issue in the 2012 election”
Wednesday, March 7
5:00 pm
Harvard University
Science Center D
1 Oxford Street, Cambridge
Carl Pope will discuss why advanced, green-tech and clean energy technologies are the key to the America that most of us want, and what the federal government needs to do.
He is the former Chairman of the Sierra Club, an American environmental organization founded by conservationist John Muir in 1892. Pope was first appointed Executive Director in 1992, and served until January 20, 2010, when he was appointed Chairman. He led the Sierra Club’s efforts to help protect 10 million acres of wilderness, including California’s Giant Sequoia National Monument, and brought litigation challenging the right of then-Vice President Dick Cheney’s energy task force to secretly hash out energy policy with major oil companies. Pope also co-authored California’s Proposition 65, which allowed citizens to sue polluters if they failed to comply with the law. More recently, he helped block 150 proposed coal-fired power plants.
Pope has worked with the Sierra Club for more than 30 years, and has served as a board member for other organizations, including the National Clean Air Coalition, California Common Cause, and Public Interest Economics Inc. He has served as Political Director for Zero Population Growth.
The Future of Energy lecture series is sponsored by the Harvard University Center for the Environment with generous support from Bank of America. This lecture is also sponsored by the Harvard Law School. All of the lectures are free and open to the public. View detailed lecture information at http://environment.harvard.edu/events/2011-11-30/future-energy
Contact:
Lisa Matthews
Assistant Director of Events and Communications
Harvard University Center for the Environment
24 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
lisa_matthews@harvard.edu
p. 617-495-8883
f. 617-496-0425
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Feb
20
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
If you’re reading this, you clearly have an interest in something to do with the Tufts Energy Conference. Why not like us on Facebook? You’ll get updates on events, conference developments, and opportunities like the Tufts Energy Competition all right in your newsfeed. Don’t worry, they don’t overdo it.
Here’s the link:
https://www.facebook.com/tuftsenergyconference?sk=wall
Feb
20
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
The idea behind a carbon tax is that all of a sudden, high-carbon sources of energy start to look less attractive, right? Well, that’s apparently not the case in Australia. Even a Carbon tax on the horizon, investment in coal, the highest-carbon fuel source has increased 62 percent.
See the article here
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Why do you think this is? Is it the case, as some have suggested, that government action on CO2 emissions is destined to fall far short of being meaningful? Alternatively, if countries’ domestic policies prevent them from burning coal for electricity, but maintain the attractiveness of mining coal for export, are the countries successfully meeting the objective of lowering carbon emissions?
Feb
16
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
Last Thursday, Fletcher School Professors William Moomaw and Bruce Everett got together for the ninth time to debate climate change, energy and the environment, at an event in ASEAN auditorium. Professor Moomaw is a Professor of Environmental Policy, and lead coauthor of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, while Professor Everett is a former employee of Exxon Mobil who teaches Petroleum in the Global Economy at the Fletcher School. The debate was organized by the Fletcher Energy Consortium (FLEC). The Center for International Environment and Resource Policy’s writeup of the event here .
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Both professors gave the international community a “D” on dealing with climate change and the environment, though for different reasons. Do you agree? Alternatively, have leaders done the best that can be expected under the circumstances, given domestic constraints, structural barriers, and lack of a common frame for responsibility? Or have expectations of the effects of climate change been exaggerated, given the large band of uncertainty in questions about the net warming effects of elements like cloud cover, and potential increased plant growth?
Professor Everett indicated that, given future trends in energy use, efforts we make in the developed world to address Carbon emissions will make little difference in global emissions in the future, since increases in emissions from China and India will dwarf any reductions made in the West. Do you agree? If not, how can the developing world increase access to energy without dramatic increases in Carbon emissions?
Feb
13
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
This event at Harvard, put on by the Harvard University Center for the Environment, may be of interest to readers of this blog:
Finding secure, safe and reliable sources of energy to power world economic growth will be one of the great challenges of this century. The Harvard University Center for the Environment invites the Harvard community to take up the challenge by participating in this ongoing series of discussions.
THE FUTURE OF ENERGY
Mary D. Nichols, Chairman of the California Air Resources Board
“California’s Low Carbon Energy Future”
Monday, February 27
5:00 pm
Harvard University
Austin Hall North
Harvard Law School
1515 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge
Mary D. Nichols, Chairman of the California Air Resources Board, will discuss the state’s pioneering climate policies and the future of energy in California and beyond.
Nichols has devoted her entire career in public and nonprofit service to advocating for the environment and public health. In addition to her work at the Air Board, she has served as Assistant Administrator for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s Air and Radiation program under President Clinton, Secretary for California’s Resources Agency from 1999 to 2003 and Director of the Institute of the Environment at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Her priorities as chairman include moving ahead on the state’s landmark climate change program (AB 32), steering the Board through numerous efforts to curb diesel pollution at ports and continuing to pass regulations aimed at providing cleaner air for Southern California and the San Joaquin Valley. She values innovation, partnerships and common-sense approaches to addressing the state’s air issues.
The Future of Energy lecture series is sponsored by the Harvard University Center for the Environment with generous support from Bank of America. This lecture is also sponsored by the Harvard Law School. All of the lectures are free and open to the public. View detailed lecture information at http://environment.harvard.edu/events/2011-11-30/future-energy
Map to Austin Hall: http://map.harvard.edu/?ctrx=759170&ctry=2962664&level=9&layers=Campus%20Base%20and%20Buildings,Map%20Text
Contact:
Lisa Matthews
Assistant Director of Events and Communications
Harvard University Center for the Environment
24 Oxford Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
lisa_matthews@harvard.edu
p. 617-495-8883
f. 617-496-0425
Become a Fan of HUCE on Facebook! |
| *|LIST:Future of Energy|*
Unsubscribe kathleen.hurley@tufts.edu from this list.
Our mailing address is:
24 Oxford St.
Cambridge, MA 02138
T: (617) 495-0368
www.environment.harvard.edu
Copyright (C) 2008 Harvard University. All rights reserved.
Forward this email to a friend |
Feb
09
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
Thanks to Conference Operations Director Kathleen Hurley for sharing this Letter to the Editor.
The Keystone XL pipeline extension is a proposed project to transport synthetic crude and diluted bitumen from Canada’s oil sands in Alberta. The pipeline requires presidential approval before it can go forward. The pipeline has encountered fierce resistance from the environmental community, largely coming from a combination of worries about the large quantity of greenhouse gas emissions coming from production of the fuel and concerns about damage to local environments and aquifers. President Obama had originally planned to postpone the decision until 2013, but was recently required by legislation to expedite the decision-making process, which led him to reject the permit application.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/08/opinion/tar-sands-and-the-pipeline.html?_r=2&scp=2&sq=harvard%20environment&st=cse
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Do you agree with the author of the letter? Are greenhouse gas emissions in canada an appropriate reason to stop a pipeline in the United States? Will the Canadians simply export the oil to the the coast, leading to the same amount of emissions, without creating jobs in the United States?
Feb
08
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
Well, it’s more like an electric highway. As has been discussed on this blog, the principal challenge for electric vehicles to date has been the limits of battery technology, and the ability to a) drive long distances and b) charge quickly. A group of Stanford researchers have taken an innovative approach to this challenge, suggesting a future in which cars charge as they drive, through infrastructure in the highways that generates magnetic fields to transmit electric currents.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/02/07/stanford-electric-car-highway_n_1260399.html
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Is this feasible? Is this approach worth the investment? With an infrastructure that is sorely in need of maintenance, is public funding an appropriate avenue for the viability of the electric car, or should the approach be more market-based?
Jan
24
2012

Paolo L Cozzi
This article discusses a recent announcement by the government of Haiti of the “Give me light, give me life,’ program, which will provide funding, in the form of loans for rural Haitians to buy small solar kits. These kits may not provide large amounts of electricity, but can be used for items like computers and cell phones. Currently only 30% of Haitians have access to electricity.
http://articles.boston.com/2012-01-23/news/30656224_1_president-michel-martelly-solar-kits-electricity
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Is investing in distributed generation a good idea for the government of Haiti? It has been said that parts of the developing world are technologically “leapfrogging” in areas like communications, skipping the step of landlines in favor of mobile phones – does distributed generation offer the same opportunity for energy, or will challenges like intermittent electricity from renewables, lack of maintenance funding, and other problems be too daunting? Should governments work to provide energy services a bit at a time, or would resources be better spent developing a more extensive, more efficient grid that serves more people?