This is a seminar presented by DOE/EERE’s
Office of Planning, Budget, and Analysis and
NREL’s Strategic Energy Analysis Center,
featuring Gregory Nemet, Assistant Professor, University of Wisconsin.
Demand subsidies or funding R&D – which works best? During this “bonus”
seminar, Gregory Nemet of the University of Wisconsin will talk about
his analysis combining an expert elicitation and a bottom-up
manufacturing cost model to compare the effects of R&D and demand
subsidies. In his work, he modeled the effects on the future costs of a
low-carbon energy technology that is not currently commercially
available, purely organic photovoltaics (PV). His research found that
(1) successful R&D programs reduced costs more than did subsidies, (2)
successful R&D enabled PV to achieve a cost target of 4c/kWh, and (3)
the cost of PV did not reach the target when only subsidies, and not
R&D, were implemented. He’ll also discuss how these results are
insensitive to two levels of policy intensity, the level of a carbon
price, the availability of storage technology, and uncertainty in the
main parameters used in the model. However, a case can still be made for
subsidies: comparisons of stochastic dominance show that subsidies
provide a hedge against failure in the R&D program.
Gregory Nemet is an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin
in the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies and in the La Follette
School of Public Affairs. He is also a member of the university’s Energy
Sources and Policy Cluster and a senior fellow at the Center for World
Affairs and the Global Economy. His research and teaching focus on
improving understanding of the environmental, social, economic, and
technical dynamics of the global energy system. He also teaches courses
in international environmental policy and energy systems analysis. He
holds a master’s degree and doctorate in energy and resources, both from
the University of California, Berkeley. His undergraduate degree from
Dartmouth College is in geography and economics.
National Renewable Energy Laboratory 901 D Street SW (adjacent to the
Forrestal Building) or 370 L’Enfant Promenade; Ninth Floor.
Please contact Wanda Addison, of Midwest Research Institute (MRI), at
[email protected] or 202-488-2202
DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
District of Columbia
30/10/2008 at 03:00PM
The Committee will explore the importance of basic research to U.S.
competitiveness. The hearing will examine research and development
budgets at agencies in the Committee’s jurisdiction, particularly the
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the National
Science Foundation (NSF), as well as interagency science programs
addressing climate change, nanotechnology, and information technology.
Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee
Science, Technology, and Innovation Subcommittee
253 Russell
11/03/2008 at 01:15PM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 19/02/2008 at 04:37PM
Mitchell Anderson at
DeSmogBlog:
NASA was given over $100 million in
taxpayers money to build the Deep Space Climate
Observatory (DSCOVR), a
spacecraft designed to measure the energy budget of our warming planet
from the unique vantage of a million miles away.
Even though it is fully completed over five years ago,
DSCOVR is still sitting in a box at the
Goddard Space Center – likely for political reasons.
In 2006, Anderson filed a FOIA request with
NASA, receiving
only
letters from scientists to NASA concerned
about the cancellation, but no documents about the internal
decision-making process.
In 2007, NOAA
proposed
a joint NASA-NOAA mission with the private
launch company Space Services Inc. using the
DSCOVR satellite.
Anderson now reports on his 2007 FOIA request
to NOAA on the fate of
DSCOVR:
My request was sent in November. I was told my documents would be
emailed on December 11. Then I got call from
NOAA General Counsel Hugh Schratwieser
before Christmas telling me that it going to take longer than they
thought but I should get the document package in early January. Mr.
Schratwieser also assured me NOAA takes
pride in their compliance with the Freedom of Information Act and that
I shouldn’t worry.
Then silence.
I have since sent five unanswered emails to
NOAA requesting updates on my request.
Government bodies like NOAA have a legal
obligation to respond to FOIA requests in 20
working days. It is now over three times that long and counting.
Since I was repeatedly told over the last two months that the package
of documents was very close to being assembled, I can only assume that
it is now complete but being held up for political reasons.
From E&E News:
Overall, the fiscal 2009 USDA budget would
cut discretionary spending by 4.8 percent. The major increases in the
budget would go to food assistance programs to cover the growing
number of people who qualify for food stamps and other aid programs.
Two of the hardest hit areas of the budget would be research and
conservation, which would each see budget cuts of almost 15 percent.
The administration’s proposal would cut more than 10 percent from
USDA’s research budget, which includes a
wide range of programs, from livestock safety to farm-based energy,
biotechnology and food safety. USDA Deputy
Secretary Chuck Conner said last week that the cuts came from wiping
out congressional earmarks for different research projects.
The White House also made what has become an annual effort to zero out
funding for a number of discretionary programs it says are redundant,
including local watershed surveys and flood prevention programs. The
Bush administration has tried to eliminate the programs in previous
years, but congressional appropriators have restored them each year.
DeLauro noted she plans to restore the funds again this year.
This year the administration also targeted a popular renewable energy
program in its spending cuts for the first time. The budget includes
no funding for grants or loans for the “Section 9006” renewable energy
program, which gives money to help farmers improve energy efficiency
on their farms and develop small on-farm business ventures in wind,
solar, biomass or geothermal energy.
The House and Senate both proposed large increases for the renewable
energy program in last year’s farm bill and appropriations measures,
and the administration had proposed expanding it in the farm bill.
USDA included it this year in a list of
programs that “serve limited purposes for which financing and other
assistance is available.”
Witness
- Edward Schafer, Secretary of Agriculture
House Appropriations Committee
Senate Appropriations Committee
Agriculture Subcommittee
2362-A Rayburn
13/02/2008 at 10:00AM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 27/12/2007 at 10:43PM
In A Solar Grand
Plan
(Scientific American January 2008), Ken Zweibel (NREL), James Mason
(Solar Energy Campaign) and Vasilis Fthenakis (Brookhaven National
Photovoltaic Environmental, Health and Safety Research Center) lay out a
vision for replacing our fossil fuel-powered electricity production to
solar energy. The editorial summary:
A massive switch from coal, oil, natural gas and nuclear power plants
to solar power plants could supply 69 percent of the U.S.’s
electricity and 35 percent of its total energy by 2050.
A vast area of photovoltaic cells would have to be erected in the
Southwest. Excess daytime energy would be stored as compressed air in
underground caverns to be tapped during nighttime hours.
Large solar concentrator power plants would be built as well.
A new direct-current power transmission backbone would deliver solar
electricity across the country.
But $420 billion in subsidies from 2011 to 2050 would be required to
fund the infrastructure and make it cost-competitive.
By way of contrast, the Friends of the Earth
analysis finds
that Lieberman-Warner (S. 2191) allocates approximately $800 billion in
subsidies to the fossil fuel industry, with about $350 billion to
subsidize carbon capture and sequestration specifically. About $350
billion is allocated to all sustainable technologies (wind, solar,
biomass, geothermal).
On October 30, The Hamilton Project at Brookings will host a two-part
forum on mitigating climate change through market mechanisms and new
technologies. In addition to the release of a new Hamilton Project
strategy paper, the forum will highlight two new discussion papers on
how to best design market mechanisms to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
and will include proposals to expand — and possibly restructure — the
federal research and development program to better promote the
development of new greenhouse gas reducing technologies.
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert E. Rubin and Hamilton Project
Director Jason Furman, also a Brookings senior fellow, will open the
event with a special award presentation, followed with opening remarks
by former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers on economic
approaches to energy security and climate change—the subject of the new
strategy paper.
The new Hamilton Project strategy paper argues that the best way to
address climate change is to give the private sector the right
incentives to undertake emissions reductions. At the same time, the
strategy calls for policies to protect low- and middle-income families
from the consequences of higher energy prices.
The two new discussion papers will feature alternate views on how to
best harness market forces to protect the environment. Gilbert E.
Metcalf of Tufts University will discuss his proposal for a carbon tax
and Robert N. Stavins of Harvard University will present his proposal
for a cap-and-trade system. John Deutch of the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and John Podesta of the Center for American Progress will
also discuss their recent proposal for a new federal research and
development strategy, and Richard Newell of Duke University and
Resources for the Future will share his ideas for creating science and
technology policies that would enable new technologies to work
effectively.
Welcome and Special Presentation
- Robert E. Rubin, Citigroup Inc. and Jason Furman, The Hamilton Project
An Economic Approach to Energy Security and Climate Change
- Lawrence H. Summers, Harvard University
Panel One
Creating a Green Market: How to Best Price Carbon
- Moderator: Sebastian Mallaby, Council on Foreign Relations
- Gilbert E. Metcalf, Tufts University
- Robert N. Stavins, Harvard University
- Jason Furman
- Kathleen McGinty, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection
Panel Two
Warming up to New Technologies: Innovating Our Way To a Stable
Climate
- Moderator: Roger C. Altman, Evercore Partners
- John Deutch, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- John Podesta, Center for American Progress
- Richard Newell, Duke University
- Kelly Sims Gallagher, Harvard University
- David Sandalow, Brookings Institution
Hyatt Regency Regency Ballroom 400 New Jersey Avenue, NW Washington, DC
Brookings Institution
District of Columbia
30/10/2007 at 09:00AM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 31/07/2007 at 04:28PM
On July 30, Speaker Pelosi set the agenda for her energy independence
initiative, which she had originally hoped to complete by July 4th. The
legislative package will be introduced to the floor in two parts:
- the Renewable Energy and Energy Conservation Tax Act of 2007
(HR
2776)
from the Ways and Means Committee, reported out at the end of June
- and the New Direction for Energy Independence, National Security, and
Consumer Protection Act (HR
3221),
which needs to be signed off by the relevant committees
HR 2776 provides tax incentives for renewable electricity
production, biofuels, efficient appliances, plug-in hybrids, and
renewable energy bonds. It pays for these incentives buy reducing oil
and gas royalties and closing the “Hummer” tax loophole.
HR 3221 is a wide-ranging
omnibus, under the jurisdiction
of the following committees:
- Education and Labor (Title I: green jobs)
- Foreign Affairs (Title II: foreign assistance and trade)
- Small Business (Title III: small business
sustainability initiative)
- Science and Technology (Title IV: research
funding—HR 364, HR
906, HR 1933, HR 2773, HR
2774,
HR 2304, HR 2313)
- Agriculture (Title V: biofuels)
- Oversight and Government Reform (Title VI: carbon-neutral government)
- Natural Resources (Title VII: Energy Policy
Act of 2005 reforms, changes in oil and gas royalties, wind energy,
CCS, wildlife, oceans)
- Transportation and Infrastructure (Title
VIII: public transportation, highways,
shipping, public buildings)
- Energy and Commerce (Title IX: appliance, lighting, and building
efficiency, smart grid, renewable fuel infrastructure, plug-in
hybrids)
- Armed Services (it’s unclear which components are under its
jurisdiction)
All amendments to HR 3221 must be
introduced
by Wednesday afternoon. The Rules Committee will
convene
Thursday at 3 PM to establish the debate rules and timetable.
After the amendment process and ratification, the package will then go
into conference to be reconciled with the Senate energy bill,
SA
1502,
passed mid-June.
Committee page.
H.R. 364 establishes an Advanced Research Projects Agency for Energy
(ARPA-E) within the U.S. Department of Energy, similar to the successful
DARPA program within the Department of
Defense. With a lean and agile organization
ARPA-E will assemble cross-disciplinary
research teams focused on addressing the nation’s most urgent energy
needs through high-risk research and the rapid development of
transformational clean energy technologies. By leveraging talent in all
sectors – from private industry, to universities, to government labs –
ARPA-E will foster a robust and cohesive
community of energy researchers and technology developers in the U.S.
This bill follows on the direct recommendations of the National Academy
of Sciences’ report “Rising Above the Gathering
Storm.”
Witnesses
- Dr. Stephen R. Forrest
- Mr. John Denniston
- Mr. William B. Bonvillian
- Dr. Richard Van Atta
House Science, Space, and Technology Committee
Energy Subcommittee
2318 Rayburn
26/04/2007 at 02:00PM
S.731, to develop a methodology for, and complete, a national assessment
of geological storage capacity for carbon dioxide, and S.962, to amend
the Energy Policy Act of 2005 to reauthorize and improve the carbon
capture and storage research, development, and demonstration program of
the Department of Energy.
Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee
366 Dirksen
16/04/2007 at 02:30PM