1999 From: Columbia University
Providing Electricity Outside The Power Grid Is Focus At Columbia Symposium March 15-17Solar, Wind, Fuel Cells Are Alternatives In Developing Countries How will a local development official know whether solar cells, a windmill or fuel cells can generate enough electricity to replace the unreliable kerosene generator that has served a rural village for decades? Soon, he or she will be able to plug local energy requirements, number of sunny days a year and local wind patterns and other data into a computer program named Homer and find out. This and other developments will be discussed at a "Symposium on Decentralized Energy Alternatives," March 15-17 at the Columbia Graduate School of Business at Columbia University. The symposium is sponsored by Columbia business school's Sustainable Development Initiative, the Earth Engineering Center, a component of the Columbia Earth Institute, and the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs. "We've located some of the top companies and individuals involved in decentralized energy and asked them to bring in the most recent technical developments, emphasizing things that haven't even been published yet," said Eugenie Bietry, director of the Sustainable Development Initiative. Providing energy services, particularly electricity, to populations in dispersed rural areas remains one of the great challenges facing developing countries. In areas where there is no well-developed electrical system, creating one can be beset with difficulties: large capital requirements, lack of service infrastructure and long construction periods. Even where there is an established grid, it is often unreliable and may provide power for only a few hours each day. As a result, governments are implementing decentralized energy technologies, which use renewable, locally available resources and are environmentally sound. Much of the market for solar photovoltaic panels, for example, lies in the developing world. Other relevant technologies include electricity generated from wind and bio-mass resources and fuel cells. This program includes a series of presentations and panel discussions by experts on a variety of issues including recent developments in decentralized energy technologies and services; regional and global socioeconomic issues as they apply to the use of decentralized energy sources; and barriers facing wider use of energy-efficient, renewable technologies. Support for the symposium has been provided by ASE Americas Inc., BP Amoco, Ballard Generation Systems, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the Northeast Sustainable Energy Association, Uncommon Sense, a nongovernmental organization based in New York City, and the United Nations. The Sustainable Development Initiative at the Columbia Graduate School of Business works to raise the level of awareness of students and staff on issues of sustainability by encouraging research and providing information for curriculum development. It offers workshops, lectures and programs on topics related to sustainable development for a variety of audiences. The Earth Engineering Center is the engineering component of the Columbia Earth Institute. Its objective is to direct engineering research toward industrial ecology, the reconfiguring of industrial activities with full understanding of their environmental consequences. The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs seeks to contribute to sustainable development by undertaking statistical and analytical work, such as integrating environmental accounting into national economic statistics; by supporting the deliberative and normative work of United Nations intergovernmental bodies; and by providing development advisory services and managing technical cooperation projects at the request of developing countries. Registration fees are $250 for corporate affiliates and $125 for non-profits, non-governmental organizations and academic affiliates. The fee includes three continental breakfasts and three lunches. Papers presented at the symposium will be issued in a joint publication by Columbia University and the United Nations. A series of follow-up workshops on related topics is envisioned. For further information, please contact Isaac Nesser, Sustainable Development Initiative, Columbia Graduate School of Business, 212-854-3489, fax 212-316-1473, or [email protected]. If you provide a fax number, a registration packet will be faxed to you. A website devoted to the symposium is at http://www.gsb.columbia.edu/research/sdi/symposium.htm. This document is available at http://www.columbia.edu/cu/pr/. Working press may receive science and technology press releases via e-mail by sending a message to [email protected]. Note to editors: Working reporters, including freelancers, may attend the conference without charge. Untranscribed audiotapes will be available on March 22. A conference program follows. ###SYMPOSIUM ON DECENTRALIZED ENERGY ALTERNATIVES March 15-17,1999 Conference Program Monday, March 15 8:00 a.m. Registration and continental breakfast 8:45-9 a.m. Welcoming comments
MORNING: ENERGY NEEDS: EFFECTIVE DEMAND AND MARKET OPPORTUNITIES 9 - 10:30 a.m. Advantages and Challenges for Decentralized Energy Russell de Lucia, President, de Lucia & Associates Vinod Mubayi, Technical Advisor, Brookhaven National Laboratory 11 - 12:30 a.m. Renewable Energy and the Environment with Perspectives On the Clean Development Mechanism Christopher Flavin, Senior Vice President, Worldwatch Institute Joel Gordes, President, Environmental Energy Solutions 12:30- 2 p.m. LUNCH Charles F. Gay, president, ASE Americas Inc. and the Greenstar Solar Health Center AFTERNOON: DECENTRALIZED ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES 2 - 3:30 p.m. Advances in Decentralized Energy Technologies Developments in Solar and Wind: Roger Taylor, National Renewable Energy Laboratories, U.S. Department of Energy Fuel Cell Power Generation and Its Fit With the Emerging Sustainable Development Model: Jorge Barrigh, Ballard Generation Systems, and Ashok Gupta, Natural Resources Defense Council 4 - 6 p.m. Applications and Economics Designing Technological Applications to Meet Development Needs: Morris Miller, Adjunct Professor, University of Ottawa, former Executive Director of the World Bank, and Deputy Secretary General, 1981 UN Conference on New and Renewable Energy, Nairobi Economics of Decentralized Energy: Shimon Awerbuch, Independent Consultant International Presentation: V. Bakthavatsalam, Managing Director, Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency Tuesday, March 16 MORNING: IMPLEMENTATION 9 - 10:30 a.m. Fostering Business, Commerce, Technological Partnerships Entrepreneurship and Market Development: Bruce McCrodden, Senior Vice President, BP Amoco Financing and Market Development: Matthew Mendis, President, Alternate Energy Development Inc. (formerly World Bank and consultant to the U.N.) 11 - 12:30 p.m. Mainstreaming Decentralized Energy: Policies and Initiatives Karl Jechoutek, Division Chief, World Bank Mike Niklas, Innovative Design; former president, International Solar Energy Society (ISES) 12:30 - 2 p.m. LUNCH: SPEAKER TO BE ANNOUNCED AFTERNOON: INTERREGIONAL LINKS 2 - 3:30 p.m. Energy Efficiency Reducing Energy Intensity through Energy and Materials Efficiency Griffen M. Thompson, Director of Global Climate Change and Developing Country Programs, International Institute of Energy Conservation European Energy Efficiency 2000 Ronald W. Bowes, Chairman of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe's Energy Efficiency Program 4 - 6 p.m. Presentations by International Participants Zhou Fengqi, Director General, Energy Research Institute, State Development and Planning Commission, China Manuel Martinez, Director Centro de Investigacion de Mexico, Universitad Nacional Autonomia de Mexico Khalilou Sall, ORGARTEC, Dakar, Senegal Ragy Farid, Technical Sector Director, New and Renewable Energy Authority, Egypt Wednesday, March 17 9 - 11 a.m. International Presentations Lu Weide, Director, Solar Division, China Rural Energy Development Agency S.P. Gon Choudhary, Director, West Bengal Renewable Energy Development Agency Oyuko Mbeche, Transportation Energy Planner, Nairobi, Kenya Mohammad Berdai, Advisor to the Director of Energy, Ministry of Energy and Mines, Rabat, Morocco 11:30 - 1:30 Panel Discussions Technology Transfer and Joint Ventures; South-South Cooperation; Conclusions; Closing Remarks 1:30 p.m. LUNCH: SPEAKER TO BE ANNOUNCED This program is tentative and subject to change.
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