Climate Change

Global Warming Sends Salamanders Packing

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Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Nov 27 2007
Summary: 
During two past episodes of global warming, salamanders moved back and forth between North America and Asia as they sought cooler climes. This long march for such a slow-moving creature has been reconstructed by UC Berkeley biologists from genetic and climatic data.

Sun Struck

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Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Nov 7 2007
Summary: 
Student concern about global warming is fueling broad research interest in harnessing 'the warm power of the sun.'

CalCAP

Name of Organization: 
CalCAP
Purpose: 
The Cal Climate Action Partnership (CalCAP) is a collaboration of faculty, administration, staff and students to reduce greenhouse gas emissions at UC Berkeley, and to enable our campus to: * Demonstrate institutional commitment * Engage academic departments * Leverage academic research * Foster local community development * Inspire individual action
Contact e-mail: 
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Berkeley professors contribute to Nobel-winning climate work

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Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Oct 12 2007
Summary: 
Several University of California, Berkeley professors have contributed to a United Nations international climate change organization that is sharing the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore. The prize was announced Friday morning (Oct. 12). Among these professors are BIE Co-Directors Inez Fung and Dan Kammen.

Berkeley Lab Scientists Contribute to Climate Change Studies that win the Nobel Peace Prize

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Peace_Prize2.jpg
Source: 
Research News
Date Posted: 
Oct 12 2007
Summary: 
Scientists at the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory were important contributors to the research on global climate change that has won this year's Nobel Peace Prize.

Climate Law Reporter

Title: 
Climate Law Reporter
Description: 
Sustainable Development Law and Policy is accepting submissions for its annual Climate Law issue. If you would like to submit an article for consideration in the Winter 2008 issue on Climate Law, please send your paper or a summary of your topic to sdlp@wcl.american.edu ASAP. SDLP's annual climate issue, The Climate Law Reporter, hopes to provide a forum for practitioners to discuss the rapidly developing events in climate law. We are hoping to evaluate climate law on an international, regional, and national scale. SDLP aims to represent a range of viewpoints, including those from academia, the private sector, public sector, multilateral organizations, and others. Please view our Winter 2007 Climate Law Reporter at http://www.wcl.american.edu/org/sustainabledevelopment/2007/07winter.pdf?rd=1 Requirements for Submissions: • Articles or abstracts should be submitted to sdlp@wcl.american.edu. • Articles must be no longer than 15 pages (double spaced, 12 point font, Times New Roman print). • Articles should be submitted electronically in Microsoft Word or a Word-compatible software program. • All articles should attempt to follow the format presented in previous issues of SDLP. This includes an introduction, which outlines the rest of the article, and a conclusion. Please refer to the link to "Back Issues" for examples. • Please provide complete citations to every fact, opinion, statement, and quote that is not your original idea. Complete citations include: the name and author of the cited document, title of publication or publisher, date of publication, relevant page numbers, and specific website address. • We encourage the submission of photographs and graphics to accompany your article. Please send proof of permission to use others' images. • Please include a 3-4 sentence biography of yourself and indicate whether you would like your email address included with the published article. We reserve the right to reject submissions and hold all submissions on file for later publication. We also reserve the right to revise your submission and/or cut text. You will have the opportunity to accept or reject any revisions. SDLP accepts submission of timely articles that have already been published elsewhere, so long as permission of the previous publisher is received.
Deadline: 
December 15, 2007

Zero Energy Commercial Buildings Initiative

Title: 
Zero Energy Commercial Buildings Initiative
Summary: 
The ambitious goal of this new ZECBI is to transform the energy use of commercial buildings in the US to routinely achieve carbon-neutral building performance within a generation.
More Information: 
LBNL has a research team of over 200 scientists working on many aspects of building energy performance, with notable successes and market impacts over the last 25 years with new technologies, systems, tools, standards, etc. But the building sector remains responsible for about 40% of energy use and carbon emissions, and over 70% of electricity use. The ambitious goal of this new ZECBI is to transform the energy use of commercial buildings in the US to routinely achieve carbon-neutral building performance within a generation. To succeed, the program will need to address industry institutional inertia, foster technological innovation in equipment, materials, and controls, develop innovative tools and predictive models to support innovative design, enhance the education of design and engineering professionals, foster technology transfer from labs to industry, develop innovative processes for delivering and operating high performance buildings, identify deployment policies that will ensure widespread adoption of high performance buildings, and develop metrics and a framework to track long term progress toward goals. There are groups already working on many of these individual issues, but no one has approached the problem in a comprehensive, integrated manner. The role of the ZECBI will be to help unify new and existing projects under one multiyear framework, with a vastly expanded level of effort, and create a roadmap for building innovation, shared by the industry, that is capable of delivering the dramatic emissions reductions necessary to mitigate climate change. The ZECBI, initiated by LBNL, is now a joint effort with the Alliance to Save Energy, American Institute of Architects, American Society of Heating Refrigerating and Air Conditioning Engineers, U.S. Green Building Council, and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development. Financial support is being sought from a variety of sources. Opportunities for UCB Students to Participate The initial ZECBI effort is broad in scope and offers many opportunities for BERC students to participate. Topics include: • Technology: What technological innovations are required to develop robust, scaleable solution packages for commercial buildings, specific to building type and location • Financing: Are there innovative approaches to develop and finance zero-energy buildings (e.g. commoditizing life-cycle energy savings) • Design Process: What changes are required in current architectural/engineering practice and construction? How would these be implemented? • Operations: How would zero-energy buildings be operated? What are the human behavior considerations, both for users and operators? How do we measure and expose the real performance of buildings? • Policy: Are current and anticipated future green building policies adequate? How do we track the overall “state of the industry” and progress towards goals? There is flexibility in how student participation is structured – both formal and informal arrangements can be made depending upon academic program requirements. Interested students and faculty are encouraged to contact us to identify potential areas for collaboration.
Contact person: 
Steve Selkowitz
Contact e-mail: 
Funded?: 
Yes

UC Berkeley Climate Action Course

Department: 
ENE,RES
Course Number: 
299
Course Title: 
UC Berkeley Climate Action Course
Instructor: 
Kammen
Description: 
With the approval of the Cal Climate Action Partnership (CalCAP - http://calcap.berkeley.edu) proposal this past spring, Chancellor Birgeneau committed UC Berkeley to reduce campus greenhouse gas emissions to 1990 levels by 2014. The proposal was written by a team of authors guided by a steering committee composed of faculty, administrators, staff, and students and chaired by Vice Provost Cathy Koshland. It was built upon and extended a campus wide sustainability assessment completed in 2005 under the Chancellor's Advisory Committee on Sustainability (CACS) that represented the first attempt to inventory campus wide greenhouse gas emissions and resource consumption and make specific recommendations for reducing the ecological impact of campus activities. This Climate Action Course will bring together interested students to study the projects currently being considered for implementation under CalCAP, identify new projects the campus might undertake, and to move them forward through action-oriented research. This course will provide motivated students an opportunity to contribute to significant reductions in campus greenhouse gas emissions and the realization of longer term sustainability goals. Course sessions will engage CalCAP contributors, facilities management, research faculty, outside experts, and the UC administration in conversation on specific CalCAP projects and additional opportunities for emissions reductions on campus. Readings will include the 2005 Sustainability Assessment, the recently adopted CalCAP Proposal, documentation on similar commitments from campuses around the country, and peer reviewed literature on emissions reductions, behavior change, energy economics, building resource use, etc.
Units: 
2
Offered: 
Fall

UC Berkeley's Alex Farrell joins governor in introducing low-carbon fuel standard for state

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Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
May 18 2007
Summary: 
California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger announced a proposed new low-carbon fuel standard for the state and praised the University of California scientists who worked intensively over the past four months to put it together. Farrell, Sperling and their joint, 20-person team not only looked at how to assess the carbon impact of fuels ranging from gasoline and biofuels to hydroelectric power, but produced recommendations to the California Air Resources Board (CARB) for policy changes needed to implement the standard. CARB is expected to adopt these policies in June as the most important of the "early action" items to meet the state's global-warming goals.

UC Systemwide Funding Opportunities

Name of Opportunity: 
UC Systemwide Funding Opportunities
Description: 
UC Systemwide Funding Opportunities UC systemwide research funding opportunities available to UC faculty, researchers and graduate students. They are arranged by these categories: Arts and Humanities Social Sciences Life Sciences Physical Sciences and Engineering Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources Office of Health Affairs (UCOP) Additional funding opportunities in support of research are available through state agencies, federal agencies, and through campus-specific sources.
Application Deadline: 
Varies
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