Which clean energy solutions are effective, and which need more work? Through explorations of household, city, and regional clean energy innovations and implementation efforts, Professor Daniel Kammen both analyzes successful innovation processes and identifies the areas that need urgent action and targeted programs. A mixture of analytic and empirical studies are used to explore what steps have worked and where dramatic new approaches are needed.

This talk was presented on March 6, 2018 as part of the IHS Markit Seminar Series.

3 questions with Kammen:

3 Questions: Innovating for the clean energy economy

Listen to this talk as a podcast:

Apple Podcasts:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/innovating-for-the-clean-energy-economy/id1348837449?i=1000406455867&mt=2

Google Play:
https://play.google.com/music/m/Ddhx7u2kr6ctosjqagtejjlofv4?t=Innovating_for_the_clean_energy_economy-MIT_Energy_Initiative

SoundCloud:
https://soundcloud.com/mitenergy/innovating-for-the-clean-energy-economy

More options:
http://energy.mit.edu/podcast

About the speaker:

Daniel Kammen is a professor of energy at the University of California, Berkeley, with parallel appointments in the Energy and Resources Group, the Goldman School of Public Policy, and the Department of Nuclear Engineering. Kammen is the founding director of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy Laboratory and former director of the Transportation Sustainability Research Center. His research focuses on energy supply; transmission; the smart grid and low-carbon energy systems; the life-cycle impacts of transportation options; and energy for community development in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. He has published extensively on these topics and testified numerous times in U.S. state and federal congressional briefings. In 2010, Kammen was appointed the first energy fellow of the Environment and Climate Partnership for the Americas; he has also served the state of California and the U.S. federal government in several other expert and advisory capacities.

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The MIT Energy Initiative is MIT’s hub for energy research, education, and outreach. Learn more at http://energy.mit.edu.

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In this Our Changing Climate environmental video essay, I look at the solutions for and whether it’s even possible to achieve 100% renewable energy by 2050. Specifically, this video looks at the obstacles renewable technologies like wind turbines and solar panels, solar power, and solar energy face in the coming decade by unpacking some of the common arguments fielded against renewables. The documentary, Planet of Humans, was recently published and is a prime example of this kind of renewable bashing. Ultimately though, I show that the problems facing renewables like wind turbine energy and solar panel energy are surmountable through existing technologies like pumped-hydro storage and grid interconnectors. Ultimately, 100% renewable fossil-fuel-free energy is not only possible but necessary to mitigate the worst effects of climate change.

Read my blog post here: https://ethical.net/our-changing-climate/solutions-to-reaching-100-renewable-energy/

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Timestamps:
Introduction – 0:00
Renewable Problems – 1:06
Storage Solutions – 5:36
A Renewable Future – 8:13
Sponsored Message – 10:00
Outro – 12:03

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Further Reading and Resources: https://www.notion.so/Renewables-Resources-f99078ec0fff4660a9619a9a7ba81205

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