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Global Sustainable Bioenergy North American Convention - Register Now!
Posted On 06/28/2010 08:30 AM

September 14-16, 2010
Marquette Hotel, Minneapolis, MN

Hosted by the Institute on the Environment, University of Minnesota

The University of Minnesota’s Institute on the Environment, with significant funding support from the Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment (IREE), is pleased to host the fifth of five continental conventions of the Global Sustainable Bioenergy (GSB) Project. North American convention co-chairs Jon Foley, director of the Institute on the Environment, and John Sheehan, scientific program coordinator for biofuels and the global environment at the Institute on the Environment / IREE, invite you to participate in this important event.

The GSB Project is a collaborative effort involving universities and institutes around the world. The aim is to create a vision and path forward for bioenergy as a global resource. Today, there is a great deal of confusion about bioenergy—with questions being raised about how, and if, it is truly a part of a sustainable energy future.

The North American meeting will ratify a continental resolution on bioenergy. We will be in a position to take advantage of all of the knowledge and insights gleaned from statements ratified for Africa, Asia, Latin America and Europe. For reference, please see the European continental resolution adopted in February 2010.


KEYNOTE ADDRESS

Roger Thurow, author of ENOUGH: Why the World's Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty, will give the keynote presentation at 7:30p.m. on Wednesday, September 15.  Following his presentation, he will be signing copies of his books.


Admission to the keynote address is included in the convention registration fee.  Individual tickets can be purchased for $30 each.

REGISTER NOW!

Tags: Global Sustainable Bioenergy Global Sustainable Bioenergy GSB Conventi


Now accepting Speaker Abstract submissions for E3 2010 - November 30
Posted On 05/11/2010 10:24 AM

E3 2010 logo

Submit your speaker abstract now for E3 2010: The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conferece - November 30, 2010 at the St. Paul RiverCentre.

Researchers, business and NGO leaders, government officials, students and other renewable energy professionals are invited to submit abstracts for presentations at E3 2010 - The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conference.

The E3 conference is presented annually by the University of Minnesota’s Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment (IREE) and showcases current technologies, environmental benefits and market opportunities in renewable energy. Deadline for submission is May 31, 2010. The conference will take place Nov. 30 at the River Centre in downtown St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.

Speakers selected to present at E3 2010 will receive complimentary admission to the conference and VIP reception plus a reimbursement for travel and lodging expenses.

Visit the E3 2009 web site for information on past conferences.

Selection Criteria

The E3 organizing committee is seeking presenters who are engaging and comfortable speaking in front of large groups. Presentations should be approximately 20 minutes in length and can be either technical or more general in nature but should focus on grand challenges and opportunities in the renewable energy sector today and into the future.

In summary, we're looking for a big-picture view of your subject area addressing several tough questions:

  • What are the core ideas at work here?
  • Why does this matter to the world?
  • What are the grand challenges around this topic?
  • What potential breakthroughs are on the horizon?

Presentations are being solicited in the following areas:

  • Energy Efficiency and Conservation
  • Energy Policy, Economics and the Environment
  • Renewable Electricity
  • Renewable Fuels and Products
  • Special Topics Related to Energy and the Environment

Selected presenters will be notified by June 15, 2010.

Please send questions to Todd Reubold, Institute on the Environment Director of Communications, or visit the E3 2010 web site for more information.

http://environment.umn.edu/e3/abstract.html

Tags: E3 2010 IREE Speakers Conferences Events Abstracts


Frontiers in the Environment Seminars - Watch Online!
Posted On 01/04/2010 10:00 AM

WThe following seminars are part of the Institute on the Environment's "Frontiers in the Environment" Seminar Series, Wednesdays at noon at the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota.


They will also be broadcast live online at  umconnect.umn.edu/IonEFrontiers and archived on the Frontiers in the Environment website for further viewing.


Feb. 3
“The Whole Village Project"
Craig Packer, Professor, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior
The Whole Village Project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of foreign aid projects in sub-Saharan Africa, where poverty is the principal cause of habitat loss. As part of the project, more than 20 University of Minnesota researchers in applied economics, agronomy, ecology, education, medicine, nursing, public affairs, public health and veterinary science are working together in 240-plus villages throughout Tanzania. The project seeks to measure changes in health, nutrition, education, socio-economics, food security, land use and natural resource status for 10 to 20 years, as well as identify best practices for development agencies, local government and village communities.

Feb. 10
"Biofuels as a Contact Sport: Shifting the Debate from Food vs. Fuel to Sustainable Land Management"
John Sheehan, Scientific Program Coordinator, Institute on the Environment
Ever since Jimmy Carter introduced the notion of gasohol to a nation beset by high prices and long lines at the gasoline pump, experts have struggled with the question of whether agriculture should feed the world or fuel the world. The result of this 40-year debate? Acrimony and confusion. Policy makers and the public don’t know what to make of it. The latest round of expert debates centers on the CO2 released from the clearing of forests due to increased biofuels demand—the so-called indirect land use effect. This is really the same old debate recast as a climate problem. John Sheehan offers a critical and common sense perspective on the controversy over sustainable use of land for food, feed, fiber and fuel production.

Feb. 17
"High-tech Global Change Experiments in Terrestrial Ecosystems: A Lot of Hot Air?"
Peter Reich, Professor, Forest Resources
Earth faces a complex set of challenges to its climate and ecological systems. Researchers have invented a diverse array of tools to help scientists and policy makers better understand what we are doing to our planet, and what the consequences might be. Among these tools are technologically advanced, multi-year outdoor experiments aimed at improving our understanding of ecosystem responses to climate warming, rising CO2 levels and other environmental changes. What are these experiments good for, if anything? And what can they not help us understand? Peter Reich will address these issues with examples from his own work in grasslands and forests in Minnesota, and the broader set of related studies from around the world.

Feb. 24
“Eyewitness to Global Warming”
Will Steger, Founder, Will Steger Foundation
Note: This event will take place at the St. Paul Student Center Theater
Will Steger will offer a vivid account of the changes he's witnessed firsthand, caused by global warming pollutants, in Arctic regions over four decades of polar exploration. Steger shares stunning photographs from his expeditions along with compelling data, satellite imagery and multimedia videos to document the deterioration in the polar ice caps. While the issue is critical, and the presentation is dramatic, Steger’s message is one of hope and empowerment. An understanding of our role in the causes and effects of global warming make this personal. But as Steger explains, solutions are readily available and, by making economically and environmentally smart choices, people can make a difference.

March 3
"One Health:  An Emerging Field in a Wicked World"
Katey Pelican, Assistant Professor, Veterinary Population Medicine
Rapid changes in human demographics, animal populations and the environment are increasingly resulting in “wicked problems” that impact health and fitness across the globe. Such problems arise in highly integrated systems and have no solution, since every action to make change results in many unintended and unanticipated outcomes. Infectious disease, food security, the biodiversity crisis and endocrine-disrupting chemicals are examples of wicked challenges at the intersection of health in animals, humans and the environment. Understanding and addressing these challenges will require a new way of doing things. Enter “One Health,” a new transdisciplinary field of study. Katey Pelican will discuss this emerging discipline and how the University of Minnesota is advancing this field.

March 10
“Engaging Audiences in the Anthropocene”
Patrick Hamilton, Director of Environmental Sciences and Earth-System Science, Science Museum of Minnesota
We live in a world being thoroughly reconfigured by human activity. Humans cumulatively have set in motion global changes that will reverberate for millennia. The term Anthropocene is being used to describe this new geologic epoch in Earth history, where humans are the dominant agents of planetary change. Global change scientific research is evolving rapidly, but the U.S. public’s awareness of and concern about global environmental issues has not kept pace, hindering the formulation of corrective societal actions. How might scientific and informal education institutions work together to help advance how solutions to pressing environmental problems are communicated and discussed by citizens and decision makers?

March 24
The Raingarden Renaissance (film screening)
Mark Pedelty, Associate Professor, Journalism and Mass Communication
The Raingarden Renaissance is a film about Metro Blooms' bold effort to clean up Powderhorn Lake. Metro Blooms and the "Neighborhood of Raingardens" volunteers are working with residents to install 150 raingardens in Powderhorn, using a similar-sized neighborhood as a control to evaluate the effect of the raingardens on stormwater quality and quantity. The film presents compelling images, sound and information related to the material, animal and human components of Metro Blooms' pioneering project. A team of University of Minnesota faculty, students and professional staff is working on the film, and would like community feedback on Part 1, a 20-minute segment covering season one.

March 31
“Life on the (Future) Mississippi: Or, It’s Not (Just) Mark Twain’s River Anymore”
Pat Nunnally, Coordinator, River Life
The Mississippi River is a critical source of drinking water, transportation and recreation for tens of millions of people, as well as an important flyway for migratory birds and a critically important fishery. Currently, dozens of groups in various disciplines are passionately engaged in planning for the future of the Mississippi and its watershed, but lacking communication in coordinating these efforts. Learn how the River Life program works from its “lab” in the Twin Cities to strengthen the connections among the University of Minnesota, the Mississippi River, and communities and organizations along the river to create a sustainable urban riverfront.

April 7
"Why We Can't Stop Eating"
Allen Levine, Dean, College of Food, Agricultural and Natural Resource Sciences
The world is home to 1 billion overweight and 300 million obese people. There are a variety of hypotheses about the cause of the obesity epidemic. This seminar will address the central nervous system controllers that regulate food intake and the rewards associated with ingestion.

April 14
"The Role of Urban Households in Pollution"
Sarah Hobbie, Associate Professor, Ecology, Evolution and Behavior
Kristen Nelson, Associate Professor, Forest Resources
The flow of carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus through urban households contributes significantly to the overall biogeochemical cycles of American cities. However, little is known about how cycles that contribute to environmental pollution vary among households, or how socioeconomic factors contribute to that variation. In the Twin Cities Household Ecosystem Project, University of Minnesota researchers are quantifying these cycles in households along an urban to exurban gradient in the Saint Paul-Minneapolis metro area. The goal is to determine how demographic and behavioral control factors contribute to household-to-household variation in biogeochemical fluxes. Ultimately, this project will inform policies intended to mitigate local and global pollution arising from human activities in cities.

April 21
"Greener, Resilient, Secure and Smart Power Grid and Energy Infrastructure"
Massoud Amin, Director, Technological Leadership Institute
Recent developments and policies, combined with potential for technological innovations and business opportunities, have attracted a high level of interest in smart power grids and energy infrastructure. The potential for a highly distributed system with a high penetration of renewable sources poses opportunities and challenges: 1) How do we retrofit and engineer a stable, resilient grid with large numbers of such unpredictable power sources? and 2) What roles will increased efficiency, energy storage, advanced power electronics, power quality, electrification of transportation, novel control algorithms, smart grid and cyber security, and policies and technologies play in transforming the power grid? This talk will focus on how the smart grid relates to all of us.

April 28
"Designing Minnesota's Energy Future"
Steve Kelley, Senior Fellow / Director, Center for Science, Technology and Public Policy, Humphrey Institute
Former state senator and current gubernatorial candidate Steve Kelley will talk about new approaches to public policy development that could help Minnesota move forward on both energy efficiency and the generation of renewable energy. He will also discuss the role that design thinking and systems approaches ought to play in developing solutions to achieve our energy savings and energy generation goals. Kelley is the director of the Center for Science, Technology and Public Policy at the University of Minnesota's Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs.


Last Chance to register for the E3 2009 Conference - St. Paul, MN
Posted On 11/09/2009 08:32 AM

E3 2009: The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conference
November 17, 2009 at the Saint Paul RiverCentre
Register now!

E3 2009: EARLY BIRD DEADLINE IS NEXT WEEK, OCTOBER 16!
How do we provide sustainable fuel, food, fiber and fresh water to a global population of 9 billion people in our lifetime? That’s one of more than 15 urgent questions we’ll explore during E3 2009.

NREL’s Larry Kazmerski, a pioneer in the field of solar photovoltaics, will offer the keynote presentation for this year’s conference. Other highlights include a super panel discussion with national experts, track sessions focused on the big questions of the 21st century, and a series of Green on the Ground workshops.

Hosted annually by the University of Minnesota’s Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment, a signature program of the Institute on the Environment, the E3 conference showcases current technologies, environmental benefits and market opportunities in renewable energy. Each November, scientists, movers and shakers, and policymakers from across the Midwest and beyond join together to share knowledge and discoveries.

iree.umn.edu/e3

Tags: Alternative-Energy


E3 2009 Conference: Early Bird deadline October 16!
Posted On 10/12/2009 12:10 PM

E3 2009: The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conference
November 17, 2009 at the Saint Paul RiverCentre
Register now!

E3 2009: EARLY BIRD DEADLINE IS NEXT WEEK, OCTOBER 16!
How do we provide sustainable fuel, food, fiber and fresh water to a global population of 9 billion people in our lifetime? That’s one of more than 15 urgent questions we’ll explore during E3 2009.

NREL’s Larry Kazmerski, a pioneer in the field of solar photovoltaics, will offer the keynote presentation for this year’s conference. Other highlights include a super panel discussion with national experts, track sessions focused on the big questions of the 21st century, and a series of Green on the Ground workshops.

Hosted annually by the University of Minnesota’s Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment, a signature program of the Institute on the Environment, the E3 conference showcases current technologies, environmental benefits and market opportunities in renewable energy. Each November, scientists, movers and shakers, and policymakers from across the Midwest and beyond join together to share knowledge and discoveries.

iree.umn.edu/e3

Tags: Renewable-Energy


Sign up now for E3 2009 - Keynote announced
Posted On 09/15/2009 08:31 AM



E3 2009: The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conference
November 17, 2009 at the Saint Paul RiverCentre
Register now!

E3 2009: REGISTER TODAY!
How do we provide sustainable fuel, food, fiber and fresh water to a global population of 9 billion people in our lifetime? That’s one of more than 15 urgent questions we’ll explore during E3 2009.

NREL’s Larry Kazmerski, a pioneer in the field of solar photovoltaics, will offer the keynote presentation for this year’s conference. Other highlights include a super panel discussion with national experts, track sessions focused on the big questions of the 21st century, and a series of Green on the Ground workshops.

Hosted annually by the University of Minnesota’s Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment, a signature program of the Institute on the Environment, the E3 conference showcases current technologies, environmental benefits and market opportunities in renewable energy. Each November, scientists, movers and shakers, and policymakers from across the Midwest and beyond join together to share knowledge and discoveries.

iree.umn.edu/e3

Tags: E3 2009 Midwest Conference Energy


Registration now open for E3 2009 - Nov 17 at the St. Paul RiverCentre
Posted On 08/24/2009 09:10 AM

Registration is now open for E3 2009: The Midwest's Premier Energy, Economic and Environmental Conference!
November 17, 2009 at the Saint Paul RiverCentre
St. Paul, MN

iree.umn.edu/e3

How do we provide sustainable fuel, food, fiber and fresh water to a global population of 9 billion people in our lifetime? That’s one of more than 15 critical issues we’ll explore during E3 2009. New this year, the conference features a lunchtime panel discussion with national experts, track sessions focused on the big questions of the 21st century, and a series of “Green on the Ground” workshops.

Hosted annually by the University of Minnesota’s Initiative for Renewable Energy and the Environment, a signature program of the Institute on the Environment, the E3 conference showcases current technologies, environmental benefits and market opportunities in renewable energy. Each November, scientists, movers and shakers, and policymakers from across the Midwest and beyond join together to share knowledge and discoveries.


Researchers, students, government officials, and nonprofit and business leaders will join together to share knowledge and discoveries through keynote addresses, breakout sessions, research posters and exhibitor displays.

REGISTER NOW!
iree.umn.edu/e3

Tags: E3 2009 Conference


About UMN Institute on the Environment
Posted On 08/03/2009 08:26 AM

Climate change. Population growth. Widespread pollution. Increasing consumption. Fossil fuel depletion. Loss of biodiversity. Degraded land and water.

Complex environmental problems have taken center stage in the early 21st century, and will present enormous challenges to our economy, security and natural resources for generations to come. These issues cut to the very foundation of our civilization. And they can’t be solved with business-as-usual thinking.

It’s time for something different.

That’s why the University of Minnesota’s Institute on the Environment (IonE) is taking a fresh approach. We’re discovering new solutions to the world’s most pressing environmental problems through innovative research, leadership development and partnerships.

Follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter!

facebook.com/UMNIonE

twitter.com/umnIonE


Tags: Renewable-Energy Alternative-Energy




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