Energy

Energy and Environmental Markets

Department: 
MBA
Course Number: 
212
Course Title: 
Energy and Environmental Markets
Instructor: 
Borenstein, Bushnell
Units: 
3
Offered: 
Spring
Course Type: 
Graduate

Berkeley Going Solar- city pays up front, recoups over 20 years

Source: 
San Francisco Chronicle
Date Posted: 
Oct 26 2007
Summary: 
Berkeley is set to become the first city in the nation to help thousands of its residents generate solar power without having to put money up front - attempting to surmount one of the biggest hurdles for people who don't have enough cash to go green.

Batteries of the Future III: Making Lithium-Ion Batteries Safer

Picture: 
batteries2.jpg
Source: 
Science@BerkeleyLab
Date Posted: 
Oct 5 2007
Summary: 
The BATT Program — Batteries for Advanced Transportation Technologies — is a $6 million program of the Department of Energy's Office of FreedomCAR and Vehicle Technologies, which is developing a new generation of batteries for use in electric, hybrid-electric, and plug-in hybrid-electric vehicles. Berkeley Lab's Environmental Energy Technologies Division (EETD) assists DOE in managing BATT Program research at Berkeley Lab and other national labs, universities, and private companies.

Center for Energy and Environmental Innovation launched

Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Oct 24 2007
Summary: 
Energy and environmental innovation is the focus of a new cross-disciplinary center housed at the University of California, Berkeley, that aims to promote viable global energy solutions.

Energy & Infrastructure Project Finance

Department: 
Boalt
Course Number: 
247
Course Title: 
Energy & Infrastructure Project Finance
Instructor: 
Marks
Description: 
This course will explore the key commercial, legal, economic and policy issues affecting the development and financing of infrastructure projects, with special emphasis on practical concerns related to investments in alternative energy and other power generation facilities. Many of these topics will be raised in the context of comparative, real-world case studies of different types of energy and infrastructure projects: (1) a wind power plant (including monetization of tax credits and use of bank debt), (2) toll roads in California and Mexico (using bank debt, long term bonds, and government support), (3) an offshore oil and gas project in Brazil (using bank debt, foreign equity, and multilateral and export credit support), (4) a Chilean airport privatization (using capital markets), and (5) divergent financing strategies and market approaches of energy companies like Calpine, Enron Europe and BP Amoco, among others.
Units: 
3
Offered: 
Spring
Course Type: 
Graduate

Molecular Foundry Receives LEED Gold Certification

Picture: 
leed2.jpg
Source: 
Research News
Date Posted: 
Oct 5 2007
Summary: 
The Molecular Foundry, a nanotechnology research facility located at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, has received a U.S. Green Building Council Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) gold certification. This is the first gold certification awarded to a building in the City of Berkeley.

Clean Tech Economics

Title: 
Clean Tech Economics
Clean Tech Economics
Description: 
The program explores the economic and policy side of Silicon Valley's boom in clean technology. Host: Dave Iverson Guests: Dan Kammen, director of the Berkeley Institute of the Environment Ira Ehrenpreis, general partner of Technology Partners and chairman of the Clean-Tech Investor Summit James L. Sweeney, director of the Precourt Institute for Energy Efficiency at Stanford University, professor of Management Science and Engineering and fellow at the California Council on Science and Technology Vindu Goel, business columnist and blogger at the San Jose Mercury News
Source: 
KQED
Picture: 
Kammen4.jpg

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

Solar project

Title: 
Solar project
Summary: 
Currently, I am on a team with graduate students and LBNL scientists working on a solar water heater project aimed at providing cheap, environmentally friendly hot water to impoverished people in third world countries. Thus far, we have developed working technology that is being tested with positive results in Guatemala and are looking to expand our research to other countries while improving and promoting our technology. With this, we are looking for a graduate business student (PhD, MBA, etc.) who would be willing to help write a business plan and help market our technology. We are looking to enter into international and US competitions in the upcoming year, such as UNIDO, and would really like to find someone soon to join our team.

Details announced of new vehicle-fuel standard

Source: 
UCB News Center
Date Posted: 
Aug 2 2007
Summary: 
UC energy experts release their much-anticipated blueprint for fighting global warming by reducing the amount of carbon emitted when transportation fuels are used in California. This "low carbon fuel standard," designed to stimulate improvements in transportation-fuel technologies, is expected to become the foundation for similar initiatives in other states, as well as nationally and internationally.
Syndicate content