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NAE “America’s Energy Future” (2008) Oil Gas Coal Nuclear BioFuels Solar, Wind, Hydro Energy Efficiency
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Quote from Charles Darwin A thing that will assume enormous importance quite soon is the exhaustion of our fuel resources. Coal and oil have been accumulating in the earth for over five hundred million years, and, at the present rates of demand for mechanical power, the estimates are that oil will be all gone in about a century, and coal probably in a good deal less than five hundred years. For the present purpose, it does not matter if these are under-estimates; they could be doubled or trebled and still not affect the argument. Mechanical power comes from our reserves of energy, and we are squandering our energy capital quite recklessly. It will very soon be all gone, and in the long run we shall have to live from to year on our earnings.
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Quote from Charles Darwin A thing that will assume enormous importance quite soon is the exhaustion of our fuel resources. Coal and oil have been accumulating in the earth for over five hundred million years, and, at the present rates of demand for mechanical power, the estimates are that oil will be all gone in about a century, and coal probably in a good deal less than five hundred years. For the present purpose, it does not matter if these are under-estimates; they could be doubled or trebled and still not affect the argument. Mechanical power comes from our reserves of energy, and we are squandering our energy capital quite recklessly. It will very soon be all gone, and in the long run we shall have to live from to year on our earnings. The Next Million Years (1953), Charles Galton Darwin
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Observations from Council on Foreign Relations (2006) Rising consumption of oil (driven by rising incomes and population growth) in the face of limited supplies will continue to put upward pressure on prices. U.S. dependence on foreign oil is not going to end in the foreseeable future. Continued U.S. reliance on imported oil has immense international consequences
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Petroleum and Natural Gas, Hard Truths (NPC 2007) 1. Coal, oil and NG will remain indispensible to meeting total projected energy demand growth. 2. The world is not running out of energy resources but there are accumulating risks to continuing expansion … 3. expansion of all economic energy sources will be required (inc. coal, nuclear, renewable, and unconventional oil and NG). … challenges … infrastructure 4. energy independence is not realistic in the foreseeable future; there can be no US energy security without global energy security 5. A majority of US energy sector workforce is eligible to retire within the next decade. 6. Policies aimed at curbing carbon dioxide emissions will alter the energy mix, increase costs, and require reductions in demand growth.
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Coal (MIT study, 2007) Coal is today a cheaper source of energy than oil, natural gas, nuclear power, or renewable sources of energy. The use of carbon capture and sequestration technology to reduce future climate change will substantially increase the cost of coal as an energy supply.
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Nuclear Energy 20 percent of US electricity today Capital intensive NRC has received 30 or so indications of interest in new construction Extending life (license) of existing plants
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Biofuels Advantages of ethanol Continually renewed, does not emit impurities, produces fewer greenhouse gases than gasoline New technologies for converting cellulose into gasoline or diesel Other (solar, hydro, geothermal, wind)
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Transportation Vehicle technologies (materials, hybrids, other fuels like NG or hydrogen) Buildings and Industry Largest source of ‘new’ energy is the energy we waste every day
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NAE “America’s Energy Future” (2008) Oil – Victor Jackson, BP Amoco (10-14-09) Gas – Kevin McCotter, Chesapeake Tim Petrus, XTO (9-23-09) Coal – several speakers Nuclear – Charles Turk, Entergy Nuclear - Dan Shapiro, Shaw Capital Investments BioFuels – Mike McDaniel, LSU CES Solar, Wind, Hydro, Smart Grid Technologies - Hilton Nicholson, Sixnet Energy Efficiency – Kim Mitchell, Community Renewal
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National Leader (USN&WR, Low Student Debt, High Graduation Rates, High Research Productivity, High “Innovation” Rates) Interdisciplinary = “Competitive Advantage” Research Micro/Nano Biomedical Trenchless Technology Applied Physics Computing and Cyberspace STEM Education and Outreach
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Carbon capture Nuclear industry Renewable fuels Energy harvesting Energy efficiency DOE Support, $2.8M, 30 distinct projects COES Convocation – March 25
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B.S. Biomedical Engineering Chemistry Chemical Engineering Civil Engineering, Construction Engineering Technology Computer Science Electrical Engineering, Electrical Engineering Technology Industrial Engineering Mathematics and Statistics Mechanical Engineering Nanosystems Engineering Physics
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M.S. Engineering (all) Engineering and Technology Management Microsystems Engineering Molecular Systems and Nanotechnology Computer Science Applied Physics Mathematics Ph.D. Biomedical Engineering Engineering Computational Analysis and Modeling
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University and Community Leaders Industry Speakers University Speakers
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Planning Committee Dr. Scott Forrest, Director, Technology Transfer Center Dr. Paul Hale, Director, Industrial Relations Ms. Kathy Wyatt, Director, Technology Business Development Center Dr. Rich Kordal, Director, Intellectual Property and Commercialization Dr. Jim Palmer, Director, Chemical and Industrial Engineering Ms. Catherine Fraser, Director of Development Mr. Jack Sharp, Director, Biomedical Research Foundation
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Support Committee Dr. Scott Forrest, Director, Technology Transfer Center Ms. June Edwards, Assistant, Technology Transfer Center Ms. Catherine Fraser, Director of Development Mr. Estevan Garcia, Media Specialist Ms. Lindsey Prince, Assistant for Director of Development
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