Find us On Facebook Twitter
News
news and events Events Energy Lectures Sustainability 2011 Sustainability 2010 Sustainability 2009 White Symposium Whiting Turner Lectures Current News News Archives Search News Press Coverage Press Releases Research Newsroom RSS feed Events Calendar events events

News Story

Current Headlines

UMD Announces Appointment of Schultheis to Lead New Regulatory Science Initiative

UMD Steel Bridge Team Meets Members of Congress at AISI Steel Day in DC

Hubbard Chosen for HistoryMakers Oral History Collection

Delivering Drugs to Inner Ear, Eyes, and Brain Made Easier with "Magnetic Syringe"

Vote to Support Team Mulciber in Wood Stove Design Challenge

BioE and Mtech Partner with Children's National Health System to Form Pediatric Device Consortium

NSF-Backed DC I-Corps Kicks Off First Cohort with 20 Federal Laboratory, University and Regional Inventors, Entrepreneur Teams

UMD Hosts 2nd Cybersecurity and Cybersafety Workshop for Girls

UMD Ranked Top Public School for Tech Entrepreneurship in 2013 StartEngine College Index

ECE Students Take Top Prize at Michigan Hackathon for Intelligent Trashcan

News Resources

Return to Newsroom

Search Clark School News

Research Newsroom

Press Releases

Archived News

Magazines and Publications

Press Coverage

Clark School RSS Feed

Events Resources

Clark School Events

Events Calendar

Bookmark and Share

"Transforming Energy" Lecture Series Launches

Jefferson Tester, MIT

Jefferson Tester, MIT

Jefferson Tester, Meissner Professor of Chemical Engineering at MIT’s Laboratory for Energy and the Environment, delivered the first “Transforming Energy” lecture on September 15 in the Kim Engineering Building. His talk was titled, “Transitioning to a Sustainable Energy System—evolving roles of renewable energy sources.”

Dr. Tester, envisioning the transition from the “age of hydrocarbons” to a “new energy destination,” cited economics and quality of life, national and international security, and the environment as the three key issues to be resolved in developing a new energy system.

His recommendation was to “start over” in searching for the right combination of energy sources, using criteria such as depletability, environmental impact, accessibility/distribution, emissions, scalability and dispatch-ability (for demand peaks). Fossil fuels would be depletable and poorly distributed; fissile fuels would have no emissions but offer waste and safety concerns; fusion would perhaps be an excellent solution, but is 50 years away; renewable sources—solar, wind, biomass, geothermal and hydrothermal—currently offer low quality and availability.

His focus was on geothermal and biomass, and the opportunities and challenges they represent. He presented information to support the idea that geothermal energy offered the best likelihood for success with the least amount of government funding, but that funding today was not being seriously considered. He saw biomass energy as potentially useful, but requiring significant change to U.S. agriculture, forestry and waste management and a large environmental impact.

Visit the lecture series web site for details about future lectures.

September 15, 2006


Prev   Next