The opportunities and challenges presented in increasing the number of electric vehicles in the light duty automotive sector

Tue, 23 Feb 2010 15:15:00 GMT

  • Senate Appropriations Committee
    Energy and Water Development Subcommittee 192 Dirksen
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Hearing on the President's Proposed EPA Budget for FY 2011

Tue, 23 Feb 2010 15:00:00 GMT

Witness
  • Lisa Jackson, Administrator, United States Environmental Protection Agency
  • Senate Environment and Public Works Committee 406 Dirksen
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Improving Energy Efficiency Through Technology and Communications Innovation

Tue, 23 Feb 2010 15:00:00 GMT

Witnesses

Panel 1

  • Aneesh Chopra, Chief Technology Officer, Office of Science and Technology Policy, Executive Office of the President

Panel 2

  • Dan Hesse, Chief Executive Officer, Sprint Nextel
  • Adrian Tuck, Chief Executive Officer, Tendril Networks, Inc.
  • Kathrin Winkler, Chief Sustainability Officer, EMC2 Corporation
  • Lorie Wigle, General Manager, Eco-Technology Program Office, Intel Corporation
  • Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee
    Communications, Technology, and the Internet Subcommittee 253 Russell
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The President’s Proposed Budget for Fiscal Year 2011 for the Department of the Interior

Wed, 10 Feb 2010 14:30:00 GMT

Witness
  • Ken Salazar, Secretary, U.S. Department of the Interior
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee 366 Dirksen
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Financial transmission rights and other electricity market mechanisms

Tue, 09 Feb 2010 15:00:00 GMT

  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee 366 Dirksen
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Climate Change and Human Health

Fri, 05 Feb 2010 16:00:00 GMT

Register at www.ametsoc.org/cb

While weather extremes, melting glaciers, and crop failures dominate the public discourse on global warming, human health risks from climate change are of growing concern to both the public and health professionals. This briefing will provide an overview of these health risks and health system responses.

Speakers
  • Rita Colwell, Ph.D. Distinguished University Professor both at the University of Maryland at College Park and at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Senior Advisor and Chairman Emeritus, Canon US Life Sciences, Inc., and President and CEO of CosmosID, Inc.
  • Howard Frumkin, M.D., Dr.P.H. Special Assistant to the Director for Climate Change and Health, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Jonathan Patz, MD, MPH. Professor & Director of Global Environmental Health at the University of Wisconsin in Madison
Moderator
  • Paul Higgins, Ph.D. Senior Policy Fellow, American Meteorological Society

First, Dr. Rita Colwell (University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins School of Public Health) will review major health threats, including heat waves, weather and hydrologic extremes, reduced air quality, rising allergen exposures, infectious diseases, reduced agricultural output, mental health consequences, and civil disruption such as population displacement. She will draw particularly on her research on infectious diseases, including both vector-borne diseases (e.g. malaria, plague, and many viral diseases) and water-borne diseases (e.g. cholera), explaining recent scientific advances in understanding the links between environmental change and disease risk.

Second, Dr. Howard Frumkin (CDC) will discuss the public health response to these threats, drawing on a framework developed at CDC and now being implemented at the Federal, state, and local levels. This response involves longstanding core public health activities, such as disease surveillance, outbreak investigations, vulnerability assessments, health communication, and preparedness planning. He will also emphasize the importance of assessing the health consequences of mitigation strategies, so decision-makers can choose the most health-protective approaches.

Finally, Dr, Jonathan Patz (University of Wisconsin) will introduce the concept of co-benefits, a key strategy in both addressing climate change and promoting health. For example, transportation strategies that reduce travel demand and favor walking, bicycling, and transit over automobiles, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and promote physical activity as well as improve air quality. The net result is a steep drop in cardiovascular disease, cancer, asthma and other ailments. Dr. Patz will cite recent analyses in the US suggesting that climate change mitigation could offer a substantial opportunity to improve the health of the public and save billions of dollars in healthcare costs and worker productivity.

The U.S. Department of Energy’s budget for fiscal year 2011

Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:00:00 GMT

Witness
  • Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy, U.S. Department of Energy
  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee 366 Dirksen
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Cutting the Federal Government's Energy Bill: An Examination of the Sustainable Federal Government Executive Order

Wed, 27 Jan 2010 19:30:00 GMT

Witnesses
  • Nancy Sutley, Chair, Council on Environmental Quality
  • Richard Kidd, Program Manager, Federal Energy Management Program, U.S. Department of Energy
  • Dorothy Robyn, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense, Installations and Environment, U.S. Dept. of Defense
  • Sam Pulcrano, Vice President, Sustainability, U.S. Postal Service
  • Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee
    Federal Financial Management, Government Information, Federal Services, and International Security Subcommittee 342 Dirksen
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The research, development, priorities and imperatives needed to meet the medium and long term challenges associated with climate change

Thu, 21 Jan 2010 15:00:00 GMT

Witness
  • Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy, U.S. Department of Energy

10:05 Bingaman Obama proposed spending $15 billion a year on energy efficiency and renewable energy research and development. It is troubling that some of the climate proposals before Congress don’t emphasize the need for energy R&D. In the coming weeks we have scheduled hearings on the DOE budget request and the loan guarantee program.

10:11 Murkowski As we look to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, we need to look at all the technologies that are out there. Oil, coal, and natural gas will continue to be primary sources of energy for our nation for years to come. Also nuclear.

10:13 Chu I’m here to speak up for clean energy R&D.

10:21 Bingaman Some of us who have tried to understand these climate change proposals is that these cap-and-trade proposals would have much more impact on some sectors than others. The transportation sector has 1/3 of emissions, but putting a price on carbon is not going to substantially affect the transportation sector compared to the electric power sector. If this is the case, then we are back to trying to find other policy intiatives to deal with emissions from the transportation sector, which means R&D should be particularly focused there. Does that make sense?

Chu I agree with you. The transportation sector is most difficult. We should continue to improve the efficiency of our vehicles. We think in long-haul trucking we can reduce energy consumption by 30 percent. The electrification of short-range personal vehicles. People in cities and suburbs typically don’t drive more than 50 miles per day. We think we can make batteries with are two to three times more energy density. And the last part is how you move away from traditional fuels.

10:27 Murkowski Nuclear nuclear nuclear.

Chu The White House is supportive of nuclear. We’re looking aggressively to help restart the American nuclear industry.

Murkowski ARPA-E did not make any nuclear funding.

Chu If we received any nuclear proposals, there were only a very few. In ARPA-E, we’re looking at short-term funding, two to three years. Many of the things that are nuclear take ten to twenty years.

Murkowksi Does the administration agree we need some kind of geologic repository?

Chu Yes.

10:32 Dorgan Power of government R&D.

Chu We need a long-term signal. Industry has to get a long-term signal that carbon limits are going down. Right now, from utility companies there’s a lot of money sitting on the sidelines wanting to know when it’s going to happen. It’s money not invested it’s jobs not created.

Dorgan We’re headed to a lower-carbon future, and we need to find ways to do that. I see two issues: energy security and the need to address climate change in a thoughtful and appropriate way.

Chu High-technology vehicles, biofuels, electrification. The loan guarantee program is held up by still frozen credit. We constantly talk about this opportunity and responsibility. We see ourselves as a major innovator in the United States for our economic prosperity. If we do this right this will be a key to American prosperity.

10:40 Bunning Nuclear nuclear nuclear! Do you know how long the nuclear industry has been on the sidelines?

Chu The last plant constructed went online in the 70s.

Bunning Isn’t it time that this and other administration have failed to pursue nuclear as an alternative, if we want a green production of electricity, that that is the prime source of doing it?

Chu I would agree that it is a very important part of the portfolio we need in the coming century.

Bunning Why do we drag our feet in licensing, assisting with the moneys available?

Chu I wouldn’t characterize it as dragging our feet. NRC is working to streamlining the procedures.

Bunning If a country like France, which I don’t consider a very progressive country, can produce 80% of its electricity from nuclear, and we’re at 20%, there’s a big gap there! If we’re going to have a greener America, nuclear power has got to be at the top of the list.

Chu I don’t think we have a disagreement here.

10:45 Sanders We have a transformational moment. Energy conservation.

Chu A lot of it will actually save money. We’re looking very hard at how we can develop self-sustaining programs.

10:51 Corker I do think 35% of energy consumption can be reduced through energy efficiency. I hope we can find ways of leveraging efficiency. To me the whole vision of using underutilized baseload to charge vehicles in the evenings is something we can get behind. Nuclear nuclear nuclear! It feels to us you’re slow-walking nuclear. It’s carbon free! It makes me less trustful of the department.

Chu I can assure you that I am not slow-walking this.

Corker To the degree climate enthusiasts can figure out how to do that without it being a net extraction from people’s pockets that would be great.

10:58 Stabenow You’ve done a good job with cars.

Chu Clean energy investment will create meaningful jobs. We should not say manufacturing is not important. It’s vitally important. There are a lot of policy tools, all of them important. You need market demand, long-term signals, tax credits, loan guarantees. If hydro power is made more efficient and better for the fish, should we give them renewable credit? Yes.

11:06 Barrasso Fascinated with carbon capture with enzymes. Coal is abundant, reliable, secure.

Chu Scientists threw the tree ring data out. It’s being investigated. It’s just a snippet. There are all these warts and bumps as science moves forward.

11:14 Menendez What policies are most important to lowering the price of solar?

11:24 Wyden Import-export and commerce.

11:32 Cantwell

11:38 Shaheen

11:45 Risch Nuclear loan guarantees to move the renaissance forward!

11:45 Murkowski I’ll submit further questions for the record. I found it troubling about White House interference with nuclear funding.

11:49 Chu Energy reaches into everything. We will be living in a carbon-constrained environment worldwide. There are a lot of smart people who are very concerned about this.

  • Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee 366 Dirksen
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15th Conference of the Parties - Climate Change Conference

Mon, 07 Dec 2009 05:00:00 GMT

Copenhagen

UNFCCC

The sessions of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change are open to Parties of the Convention and Observer States (Governments), the United Nations System and observer organizations duly admitted by the Conference of the Parties. In addition, accredited press is allowed to cover the proceedings of the Convention.

Participation in COP15 is restricted to duly nominated representatives of Parties, observer States, admitted observer organizations and accredited press/media. The sessions are not open to the public.

COP 15 comprises a number of sessions of the Subsidiary Bodies of the Convention, its Kyoto Protocol, bilateral and multilateral meetings as well as side events and exhibits.

Five Parties have recently made proposals for a protocol under the Convention pursuant to Article 17 of the Convention.

The secretariat has also received twelve proposals by Parties for amendment to the Kyoto Protocol pursuant to Articles 20 and 21 of the Protocol.

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