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Energy and Environmental Markets
Submitted by cmjones on April 19, 2007 - 10:13am.Department:
BA
Course Number:
212
Course Title:
Energy and Environmental Markets
Instructor:
Wolfram, Bushnell
Description:
Drawing on the tools of economics and finance, we study the business and public policy issues that these changes have raised in energy markets. Topics include the development and effect of organized spot, futures, and derivative markets in energy; the political economy of deregulation; climate change, environmental impacts and policies related to energy production and use; privatization of publicly owned energy assets; market power and antitrust; and the transportation and storage of energy commodities. We examine the economic determinants of industry structure and evolution of competition among firms in these industries; investigate successful and unsuccessful strategies for entering new markets and competing in existing markets; and analyze the rationale for and effects of public policies in energy markets.
Offered:
Fall and Spring
Course Type:
Graduate
Indoor Air Quality
Submitted by cmjones on October 26, 2006 - 3:12pm.Department:
CIV ENG
Course Number:
109
Course Title:
Indoor Air Quality
Instructor:
Nazaroff
Description:
Study of air pollutants in indoor environments such as private residences, offices, schools, and commercial and public buildings. Overview of the factors that govern indoor pollutant concentrations. Building ventilation principles and practice. Detailed exploration of characteristics and control of several pollutant classes, such as radon and its decay products, volatile organic compounds, and combustion byproducts. Elements of a control strategy
Units:
3
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Environmental Law and Policy
Submitted by cmjones on March 14, 2007 - 1:23pm.Department:
Boalt
Course Number:
271
Course Title:
Environmental Law and Policy
Instructor:
Doremus, Farber
Description:
This introductory course is
designed to explore fundamental legal and policy issues in environmental law.
By focusing on constitutional issues and a limited number of federal
statutes--principally the the Administrative Procedure Act, the Clean Air
Act; the Clean Water Act; CERCLA (the Superfund law),; the National
Environmental Policy Act; and the Endangered Species Act--the course exposes
students to the principal approaches to environmental law (litigation,
command and control regulation, market incentives, and providing
information), as well as to the challenges of setting environmental policy
goals and choosing policy targets. The course is designed both for students
who intend to pursue environmental studies further and for those who simply
want to gain a basic understanding of this key area of public policy.
Units:
3
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Graduate
The Water Planet
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 12:24pm.Department:
EPS
Course Number:
3
Course Title:
The Water Planet
Instructor:
Dietrich
Description:
An overview of the processes
that control water supply to natural ecosystems and human civilization.
Hydrologic cycle, floods, droughts, groundwater. Patterns of water use,
threats to water quality, effects of global climate change on future water
supplies. Water issues facing California.
Units:
2
Offered:
Fall and Spring
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Introduction to Oceans
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 12:38pm.Department:
EPS
Course Number:
C82
Course Title:
Introduction to Oceans
Instructor:
Powell
Description:
The geology, physics, chemistry,
and biology of the world oceans. The application of oceanographic sciences to
human problems will be explored through special topics such as energy from
the sea, marine pollution, food from the sea, and climate change.
Units:
2
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Stratigraphy and Earth History
Submitted by cmjones on March 6, 2007 - 12:48pm.Department:
EPS
Course Number:
115
Course Title:
Stratigraphy and Earth History
Instructor:
Alvarez
Description:
Collecting, analyzing, and
presenting stratigraphic data; dating and correlating sedimentary rocks;
recognizing ancient environments and reconstructing Earth history; seismic
and sequence stratigraphy; event stratigraphy and neocatastrophism;
applications of stratigraphy to climate change, petroleum geology, and
archaeology
Units:
4
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Environment and Technology from the Policy and Business Perspectives
Submitted by cmjones on April 19, 2007 - 10:22am.Department:
PUB POL
Course Number:
290
Course Title:
Environment and Technology from the Policy and Business Perspectives
Instructor:
Taylor
Description:
The natural environment and technology are inextricably linked. The natural environment provides both the initial inputs as well as the ultimate disposal locations for the technologies that drive today's economy. As a result of the close relationship between the environment and human technology, technology has at times been cast as both the ultimate villain and the ultimate hero in environmental policy circles. This class introduces students to many features of the relationship between technology and the natural environment over time. It explores past (for the most part) environmental policy issues, such as acid rain and ozone depletion, through the lens of specific technologies that were important to both policy and business interests. It introduces some of the environmental strategies that are being used by both policy-makers and business to affect technology development and adoption today (e.g., Energy Star, TQEM). And it delves into the climate change debate, an ongoing issue on the environmental policy agenda in which harnessing the forces of technological innovation will be crucial to environmental progress.
Units:
4
Offered:
Fall and Spring
Course Type:
Graduate
Issues in Chemistry
Submitted by cmjones on October 26, 2006 - 3:02pm.Department:
CHEM
Course Number:
98B
Course Title:
Issues in Chemistry
Description:
This seminar will focus on one or several related issues in society that have a significant bearing on chemistry. Particular topics will differ from course section to course section and from year to year. Representative examples: atmospheric ozone, nuclear waste, solar energy, water, agrichemicals. Students will search information sources, invite expert specialists to speak, prepare oral and written reports.
Units:
1
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Environmental Microbiology
Submitted by cmjones on October 26, 2006 - 3:16pm.Department:
CIV ENG
Course Number:
114
Course Title:
Environmental Microbiology
Instructor:
Alvarez-Cohen
Description:
The scope of modern environmental engineering requires a fundamental knowledge of microbial processes with specific application to water, wastewater and the environmental fate of pollutants. This course will cover basic microbial physiology, biochemistry, metabolism, growth energetics and kinetics, ecology, pathogenicity, and genetics for application to both engineered and natural environmental systems
Units:
3
Offered:
Fall
Course Type:
Undergraduate
Environmental Engineering
Submitted by cmjones on October 26, 2006 - 3:13pm.Department:
CIV ENG
Course Number:
11
Course Title:
Environmental Engineering
Instructor:
Alvarez-Cohen, Nazaroff
Description:
Quantitative overview of the properties of environmental contaminants and the transport and transformation processes that govern their concentrations in air and water. Fundamental topics include environmental chemical equilibria and kinetics, reactor models, and elementary transport phenomena. Selected applications to issues in water quality engineering, air quality engineering, and hazardous waste management.
Units:
3
Course Type:
Undergraduate
