WonkLine: April 4, 2009 1

Posted by Wonk Room Tue, 07 Apr 2009 13:53:00 GMT

From the Wonk Room.

Windmills off the East Coast could generate enough electricity to replace most, if not all, the coal-fired power plants in the United States,” Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said Monday. “It is not technology that is pie-in-the sky; it is here and now.”

In a letter to Science not available to the public, prominent climate scientists argue “it is imperative we improve the exchange of information between scientists and public stakeholders.”

As Antarctic ice shelves crumble at the end of the southern summer, the northern summer begins with the Arctic “on thinner ice than ever before,” with 90 percent of sea ice less than three years old.

2009 Energy Conference: A New Climate For Energy

Posted by Brad Johnson Tue, 07 Apr 2009 11:30:00 GMT

The 2009 EIA conference is being held April 7-8 at the Washington Convention Center.

Please register onsite at the Walter E Washington Convention Center starting at 7:30am on Tuesday, April 7th.

Tuesday agenda
7:30 AM Registration and Badging
9:00 AM Plenary
Welcome – Howard Gruenspecht
Acting Administrator, Energy Information Administration

Keynote Address – Dr. Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy

Energy and the Macroeconomy – William D. Nordhaus, Sterling Professor of Economics, Yale University

Energy in a Carbon-Constrained World – John W. Rowe, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Exelon Corporation
10:30 AM Break
Concurrent Sessions
11:00 AM
(1) The Future for Transport Demand (2) What’s Ahead for Natural Gas Markets?
Moderator: Andy Kydes (EIA) Moderator: Steve Harvey (EIA)
Speakers:
  • Lew Fulton (International Energy Agency)
  • David Greene (Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
  • Lee Schipper (Precourt Institute, Stanford University)
  • Speakers:
  • Brian Jeffries (Wyoming Pipeline Authority)
  • James Simpson (BENTEK Energy, LLC)
  • Rick Smead (Navigant Consulting)
  • John Strom (Haddington Ventures, LLC)
  • Christine Tezak
  • 12:30 PM Lunch Break
    1:45 PM
    (3) Meeting the Growing Demand for Liquids (4) Electric Power Infrastructure: Status and Challenges for the Future
    Moderator: Glen Sweetnam (EIA) Moderator: Scott Sitzer (EIA)
    Speakers:
  • Eduardo González-Pier (PEMEX)
  • David Knapp (Energy Intelligence Group)
  • Fareed Mohamedi (PFC Energy)
  • Speakers:
  • P. Kumar Agarwal (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission)
  • Timothy J. Brennan (University of Maryland)
  • Mark G. Lauby (North American Electric Reliability Corporation)
  • 3:15 PM Break
    3:30 PM
    (5) Renewable Energy in the Transportation and Power Sectors (6) Financial Markets and Short-Term Energy Prices
    Moderator: Michael Schaal (EIA) Moderator: Tancred Lidderdale (EIA)
    Speakers:
  • Denise Bode (American Wind Energy Association)
  • Bob Dinneen (Renewable Fuels Association)
  • Bryan Hannegan (Electric Power Research Institute)
  • David Humbird (National Renewable Energy Laboratory)
  • Speakers:
  • Jeffrey Harris (Commodity Futures Trading Commission)
  • Robert McCullough (McCullough Research)
  • Adam E. Sieminski (Deutsche Bank)
  • Robert Weiner (George Washington University)
  • 5:00 PM Adjourn

    WonkLine: April 3, 2009

    Posted by Wonk Room Fri, 03 Apr 2009 13:17:00 GMT

    From the Wonk Room.

    In Bonn, White House climate negotiator Jonathan Pershing said Obama’s plan to lower greenhouse gases to 1990 levels by 2020 is in the overlap of pragmatism and science.

    Calling on developed nations to cut greenhouse emissions by “at least 45 percent below 1990 levels by 2020,” small island states say current targets are “going to destroy their countries.”

    On Wednesday, 15 Democrats joined every Republican senator to preserve the filibuster against green economy legislation, even if “the Senate finds that public health, the economy and national security of the United States are jeopardized by inaction on global warming.”

    Happy Hour: Making Finance Sustainable

    Posted by Brad Johnson Mon, 30 Mar 2009 22:30:00 GMT

    Please come to the inaugural Hill Heat Happy Hour at the Reef in Adams Morgan, to drink Manhattans and discuss Copenhagen, and mix beers with biochar. Our special guest speaker will be Jerome Guillet, a top wind energy financier and sustainable energy blogger. In a brief presentation, Making Finance Sustainable, Jerome will discuss how to avoid another global financial meltdown and what barriers exist to the financing of the renewable energy sector.

    RSVP

    Jerome Guillet is a French investment banker based in Paris, specializing in the energy sector, and more specifically on wind power. He blogs as “Jerome a Paris” on DailyKos and other sites and is editor of the European Tribune (www.eurotrib.com), a website and European politics and international affairs, and contributing editor to The Oil Drum (www.theoildrum.com), a website focused on energy. He’s also a member of the “Energize America” Netroots effort to draft a sane energy policy.

    The Reef
    2446 18th St NW
    Washington, DC 20009

    RSVP now

    Come to the Inaugural Hill Heat Happy Hour with Jerome Guillet

    Posted by Brad Johnson Sun, 29 Mar 2009 12:56:00 GMT

    Please come to the inaugural Hill Heat Happy Hour at the Reef in Adams Morgan Monday afternoon at 6:30, to drink Manhattans and discuss Copenhagen, and mix beers with biochar. Our special guest speaker will be Jerome Guillet, a top wind energy financier and sustainable energy blogger. In a brief presentation, Making Finance Sustainable, Jerome will discuss how to avoid another global financial meltdown and what barriers exist to the financing of the renewable energy sector. Raise your spirits while you raise your glass, and share ideas while you share a pitcher.

    Jerome Guillet is a French investment banker based in Paris, specializing in the energy sector, and more specifically on wind power. He blogs as “Jerome a Paris” on DailyKos and other sites and is editor of the European Tribune (www.eurotrib.com), a website and European politics and international affairs, and contributing editor to The Oil Drum (www.theoildrum.com), a website focused on energy. He’s also a member of the “Energize America” Netroots effort to draft a sane energy policy.

    RSVP here.

    Pending legislation to strengthen American manufacturing through improved industrial energy efficiency (S. 661)

    Posted by Brad Johnson Thu, 26 Mar 2009 13:30:00 GMT

    Restoring America’s Manufacturing Leadership through Energy Efficiency Act of 2009

    The United States faces long-term energy, climate, and competitiveness challenges that go far beyond the economic hurdles that we are facing today. Our global competitors are gaining in productivity and capturing high-value manufacturing capabilities and products that were invented in the U.S. With the convergence of these challenges, we have reached a turning point in our industrial history – to use these challenges as an opportunity for the renewal and transformation of U.S. industry and manufacturing to compete globally through sheer technical prowess and product value superiority, reducing our dependence on carbon-based fuels, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and increasing productivity. This legislation takes the first steps in achieving this transformation by focusing on providing financing mechanisms for manufacturers to implement cost-competitive, energy efficient equipment and processes, as well as by establishing public/private partnerships with industry to map out where advanced American manufacturing is headed and to develop and deploy the breakthrough processes and technologies that will take us there.

    1. Provides financing mechanisms for industry to retool and implement advanced technology, reducing energy intensity and emissions, while increasing competitiveness.
    • Establishes DOE grants to community lender/state partnerships to establish regional revolving loan programs for manufacturers.
    • Links DOE’s energy assessments to SBA Loans
    2. Revives and strengthens our industrial competitiveness through public-private partnerships to develop and deploy the new technologies and processes needed to be globally competitive in a carbon and energy constrained world.
    • Establishes partnerships between the Industrial Technologies Program (ITP) and other Federal applied technology programs to engage in early stage manufacturing technology development.
    • Directs DOE to benchmark our domestic industry by assessing the cost, energy and ghg emissions savings potential of commercially available, but not widely implemented industrial technologies.
    • Develops with industry, technology roadmaps to map out how to achieve decreased energy intensity and emissions, while increasing competitiveness.
    • Expands the regionally based Industrial Assessment Centers to reach more small and medium-sized manufacturers and train the industrial engineers of tomorrow.
    • Establishes Industrial Innovation Grants to encourage and reward innovation in industrial processes and technologies.
    3. Realizing and Capturing the Future of Manufacturing in the United States.
    • Establishes a joint industry-government manufacturing partnerships to shift our industry towards utilizing advanced, sustainable manufacturing technologies and processes to compete in a low-carbon global economy.
    • Directs the National Academies of Science to evaluate the critical manufacturing capabilities and supply chain components needed to capture the development and production of advanced energy technologies in the U.S.

    Full text of S. 661

    Green Intelligent Buildings Conference

    Posted by Brad Johnson Wed, 25 Mar 2009 12:00:00 GMT

    Join us to learn about the technologies, practices, and processes that will be instrumental to infrastructure and economic renewal.

    Featured Keynote: Kathleen Hogan, Director of Climate Protection, Partnerships Division U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

    Kathleen Hogan, Director of the Climate Protection Partnerships Division at the U.S. EPA, will discuss the very significant contribution and role of buildings with respect to carbon reduction, and the opportunities for building energy efficiency to be a vital element of a carbon solution. Furthermore, given increasing interest in building performance as part of a new wave of policies and programs, Kathleen will also discuss the EPA’s leading role in building performance initiatives, including programs such as ENERGY STAR and Climate Leaders.

    Conference Web Site

    The Westin Arlington Gateway
    801 North Glebe Road
    Arlington, Virginia 22203

    Renewable Natural Gas - A Clean Solution to Climate and Energy Challenges

    Posted by Brad Johnson Tue, 24 Mar 2009 18:00:00 GMT

    Renewable natural gas is an important part of the portfolio of clean energy solutions needed to answer the climate and energy challenges that are before us today.

    This congressional briefing will bring together a panel of policy and industry experts, and answer the following questions:
    • What is renewable natural gas?
    • What are its energy and environmental benefits?
    • What are its economic benefits—how does it help communities and create jobs?
    • What are the legislative proposals that would support its expansion?
    Presented by:
    • American Gas Association
    • Business Council for Sustainable Energy
    • Gas Technology Institute
    Opening and Objectives
    • Jeff Petrash, Senior Managing Counsel, American Gas Association
    • Lisa Jacobson, Executive Director, Business Council for Sustainable Energy

    Program

    Panel 1: What is Renewable Natural Gas & How Does it Benefit the Environment
    • Dan Lefevers, Executive Director, Gas Technology Institute
    • Chris Voell, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (invited)
    Panel II: Renewable Biogas – Helping Communities and Creating Jobs
    • Rich Kessel, President & CEO, Environmental Power Corporation
    • Marisa Uchin, Manager, Federal Government Affairs, PG&E Corporation

    Question & Answer and Closing Remarks

    Please RSVP to Shirleen Timbers at stimbers@aga.org or (202) 824-7209.

    Is Subsidizing Commercial Energy Projects the Best Way for America to Achieve its Energy Goals?

    Posted by Brad Johnson Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:00:00 GMT

    The ethanol mandate taught us that energy subsidies for commercial energy projects can lead to unintended consequences and ultimately be counterproductive. Yet Washington’s attempts to address America’s energy questions continue to rely heavily on preferences, mandates, and subsidies for energy commercialization. This is causing energy experts from across the political spectrum to begin questioning the role of subsidies in energy policy. Is this an area where liberals and conservatives might agree?

    Join us for a panel with four politically diverse energy experts who will discuss these questions and others as they investigate where agreement exists on the role of energy subsidies, mandates, and preferences in commercializing energy in the United States.

    Speakers
    • Peter Bradford, Vermont Law School, former NRC Commissioner and Union of Concerned Scientists Board Member
    • Marlo Lewis, Senior Fellow, Competitive Enterprise Institute
    • Doug Koplow, Founder, Earth Track
    • Ben Lieberman, Senior Policy Analyst, Energy and Environment, The Heritage Foundation
    Hosts
    • Jack Spencer, Research Fellow in Nuclear Energy Policy, The Heritage Foundation
    • Henry Sokolski, Executive Director, Nonproliferation Policy Education Center (NPEC)

    214 Massachusetts Ave NE

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Nuclear Energy—But Were Afraid to Ask

    Posted by Brad Johnson Tue, 24 Mar 2009 16:00:00 GMT

    The nuclear science and engineering education and research community cordially invites you to attend a luncheon briefing: “Everything You Wanted To Know About Nuclear Energy—But Were Afraid to Ask.”

    Sponsored by:
    • The Nuclear Engineering Department Heads Organization
    • National Organization of Test, Research, and Training Reactors
    • Nuclear Energy Institute
    • American Nuclear Society

    This lunch will feature prominent scholars and experts from universities in 25 different states. The event complies with rules for a widely attended event.

    RSVP: Please RSVP with Sherazhad Hakky via e-mail: ssh@nei.org. Please note that space is extremely limited. RSVPs must be received by Monday, March 23.

    Older posts: 1 ... 43 44 45 46 47 ... 91