News Items, January - March 1998
Supported partially by CEI funds, the Energy Laboratory organized and
hosted a 70-person workshop in November 1997 to launch the new collaborative
research initiative, Program on Energy Choices in a Greenhouse Gas Constrained
World (see the news item in e-lab, October-December
1997). In February, representatives of selected petroleum companies
participated in a follow-up workshop that focused on research topics that
those companies might support. Jefferson W. Tester, director of the Energy
Laboratory and professor of chemical engineering, is director of the Program
on Energy Choices. Elisabeth M. Drake, associate director of the Energy
Laboratory, is program manager. The Energy Choices Advisory Board, chaired
by Professor Marks, includes the following Energy Laboratory researchers:
Professor Tester; John B. Heywood, Sun Jae Professor of Mechanical Engineering;
Henry D. Jacoby, William F. Pounds Professor of Management; and Malcolm
A. Weiss, senior research staff member in the Energy Laboratory.
Partial funding for the Program on Energy Choices comes from the CEI's
MIT Venture Fund for Energy Choices, which was established in fall
of 1997 with a grant from the V. Kann Rasmussen Foundation. These funds
are used in conjunction with funds from corporate and other sponsors to support
long-range, innovative research in strategic areas for which other funding
is not readily available. Two Venture Fund initiatives are led by researchers
affiliated with the Energy Laboratory. Leon R. Glicksman, professor of
building technology and director of MIT's Building Technology Program,
is working with his MIT group and researchers at Tsinghua University to
assess China's building sector, with a focus on designs and technologies
that will improve energy-use efficiency. Mujid S. Kazimi, professor of nuclear engineering, and his MIT colleagues are collaborating
with researchers at several Chinese universities to help China develop
safety and performance standards for its new but potentially expanding
nuclear industry.
The Energy Laboratory is also closely involved in the Alliance for
Global Sustainability (AGS), another program that falls under the auspices
of the CEI. The AGS is a partnership of three universities--MIT, the Swiss
Federal Institutes of Technology, and the University of Tokyo--that was
created in 1994 as a strategic approach to the problems of global sustainability.
Researchers from the three universities work together to develop and promote
new policies and processes to deal with international sustainability issues.
The annual meeting of the AGS was held in Zurich, Switzerland, on January
21-24. Among the 350 attendees were Professor Tester, Dr. Drake, and Stephen
Connors, Energy Laboratory staff member and director of the Laboratory's
Electric Utility Program. The meeting was designed to establish a working
relationship between the university researchers and governments and residents
of developing countries. Discussion focused especially on issues relating
to rapidly developing "megacities" including Jakarta, Shanghai, Mexico
City, New Delhi, Lagos, and Beijing. The AGS International Advisory Board
also heard progress reports on the first set of AGS research projects,
launched in 1997, and approved funding for an additional 16 projects, bringing
the total number of AGS projects to 37.
With support from the AGS, the MIT Venture Fund for Energy Choices,
and select industrial organizations, the Energy Laboratory has initiated
numerous research projects within the Program on Energy Choices.
One such project falls in the area of improved buildings, neighborhoods,
and urban environments. With funding through the AGS from Kawasaki Heavy
Industries, Professor Glicksman and his sustainable-buildings group are
collaborating with Japanese researchers in the University of Tokyo's "Tokyo
Half Project," which aims to identify urban environments that will
reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 50% from today's levels. This work builds
on the group's previously described research focusing on China's building
sector. Two other AGS-funded projects, led by Mr. Connors, bridge energy
needs for buildings and energy supply. "Decision Framework for Energy Choices"
seeks to extend the multi-attribute approach developed by Mr. Connors and
the Analysis Group for Regional Electricity Alternatives (AGREA) to other
energy sectors and sustainability issues, with a focus on developing nations
such as China. The SESAMS project (Strategic Electric Sector Assessment
Methodology under Sustainability Conditions), which involves collaborators
at MIT, the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology in Zurich and Lausanne,
and the Paul Scherrer Institut, has received an additional two years of
support. The researchers will add life-cycle analysis to their already
robust strategic planning and decision support research capabilities.
MIT has established the Center for Environmental Initiatives
(CEI) to facilitate and coordinate Institute-wide activities on emerging
environmental and sustainability issues that affect worldwide development
and welfare. Nearly 10% of all MIT on-campus research focuses on environmental
topics, and the CEI seeks to develop synergy among those existing programs
and to identify fertile areas for new ones. In addition, the CEI supports
activities to disseminate the knowledge being built--both within and outside
MIT--and to translate that knowledge into progressive MIT educational programs.
Director of the CEI is David H. Marks, the James Mason Crafts Professor
of Civil and Environmental Engineering. The Energy Laboratory collaborates
closely with the CEI, sharing administrative resources as well as participating
in several activities and programs that fall under CEI auspices.