Saturday, December 31, 2022

Energy (and Other) Events Monthly - January 2023

 **Conferences**


Reducing the Threat of Nuclear War: Social and Economic Costs of the Current Nuclear Weapons Buildup
Saturday, January 21

Addressing Climate Emergency for Small Islands States: The case of the Maldives
Monday, January 30

**Lecture Series**

Recanati-Kaplan Talks:  Two Years After Insurrection: A Conversation with Dr. Barbara F. Walter & Farai Chideya
Wednesday, January 4

An Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
Fridays, January 6 through January 27

Beyond Plastics Webinar - Pollution by Chemicals and Plastics: The Stealth Threat to Planetary Health
Thursday, January 12

GreenGov Webinar Series — Advancing the Global Sustainable Development Goals in our Personal and Professional Spheres
Friday, January 13

Cool as a Cucumber: The food and climate nexus at MIT (an IAP series)
Wednesday, January 18 (More dates through February 1, 2023)

NECEC Emerging Trends Series:  Decarbonizing Building Heating
Thursday, January 19

Space Food for the Final Frontier
Thursday, January 19, Friday, January 20, Friday, January 27

Computational modeling for clean, reliable, and affordable electricity
Monday, January 23 More dates through January 27, 2023

A Changing Planet Seminar by Sir James Bevan
Tuesday, January 24

MIT AgeLab Aging & Equity Series: Climate Change and Health: Age and Intergenerational Considerations
Friday, January 27

**Events**

SEA-CO2 Seminar: Sensing Exports of Anthropogenic Carbon through Ocean Observation, an upcoming ARPA-E program on mCDR MRV technology development
Monday, January 9

Gaming Climate Change: Challenges and More Challenges
Tuesday, January 10

Accelerate to Net Zero Europe: The Carbon Trust Event Series
Wednesday, January 11

Harvard Climate Justice Design Fellowship Virtual Showcase
Wednesday, January 11

US Green Building Council-LA Net Zero Accelerator Demo Day & Expo
Thursday, January 12

American Perceptions of Climate Change (IAP Workshop)
Thursday, January 12

What Magic Can Teach Us About Misinformation
Friday, January 13

Small-Scale Agricultural Climate Resiliency 
Tuesday, January 17

How Low-Carbon Ammonia Can Help Fight Climate Change
Wednesday, January 18

The State of Carbon Dioxide Removal - Report launch
Thursday, January 19

Homelessness in The United States: Context, Scope, and Approaches
Friday, January 20

LDEO Earth Science Colloquium Dr. Jade D'Alpoim Guedes
Friday, January 20

At Home on an Unruly Planet: Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth, with Madeline Ostrander
Tuesday, January 24

U.N. Perspective Series: Clean Water & Sanitation
Wednesday, January 25

Democracy and peace at stake? The rise of geo-strategy in energy transition
Wednesday, January 25

US Nuclear Weapons Accidents: A Brief History and the Evolution of Response
Thursday, January 26

Brian Eno and Donna Grantis: Arts’ Role in the Climate Crisis
Friday, January 27

Interspecies Attentiveness: An Artist Panel Discussion
Thursday, February 2

Wikipedia edit-a-thon on climate change
Friday, February 3

Housing as a Climate Lever, with Scott Wiener
Monday, February 6 

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These kinds of events below are happening all over the world every day and most of them, now, are webcast and archived, sometimes even with accurate transcripts. Would be good to have a place that helped people access them. 

This is a more global version of the local listings I did for about a decade (what I did and why I did it at http://hubeventsnotes.blogspot.com/2013/11/what-i-do-and-why-i-do-it.html) until September 2020 and earlier for a few years in the 1990s (https://theworld.com/~gmoke/AList.index.html).  

A more comprehensive global listing service could be developed if there were enough people interested in doing it, if it hasn’t already been done.  

If anyone knows of such a global listing of open energy, climate, and other events is available, please put me in contact.

Thanks for reading,

Solar IS Civil Defense,
George Mokray
gmoke@world.std.com

http://hubeventsnotes.blogspot.com - notes on lectures and books
http://solarray.blogspot.com - renewable energy and efficiency - zero net energy links list
http://cityag.blogspot.com - city agriculture links list
http://geometrylinks.blogspot.com - geometry links list
http://hubevents.blogspot.com - Energy (and Other) Events
http://www.dailykos.com/user/gmoke/history - articles, ideas, and screeds

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**Conferences**
———— 

Reducing the Threat of Nuclear War: Social and Economic Costs of the Current Nuclear Weapons Buildup
Saturday, January 21
1:00 pm - 6:00 pm EST 
Online
RSVP at https://secure.everyaction.com/Ciay2o7gekuNmQ4K0x1pEg2

The 2023 “Reducing the Threat of Nuclear War” Conference will be held virtually on Saturday January 21, 1-6 pm (Eastern). This annual gathering is one of the major national conferences addressing this acute problem.   Given the tragic events in Ukraine, tensions with China over Taiwan, and provocations from North Korea, we need to accelerate effort toward clear analysis, peaceful resolutions and nuclear disarmament. The subtheme this year will be “The Social and Economic Costs of the Nuclear Weapons Buildup”. Particular attention will be given to the destructive effect of excessive weapons spending on human needs.  Attendees should sign up for one Breakout in the first set (3 pm) and one in the second set (4:30 pm).

1:00 pm Welcome and Tasks of the Day – Jonathan King
Ukraine, Taiwan and North Korea – Phyllis Bennis (Institute for Policy Studies)
Dangers of First Use – Elaine Scarry (Campaign for Peace, Disarmament and Common Security);
Nuclear Winter -Alan Robock (Rutgers University);
Extraordinary Costs of Nuclear Weapons Upgrades – William Hartung (Quincy Institute).
2:00 pm –Social and Economic Costs of the Nuclear Weapons Buildup (Rosemary Kean, Chair):
Poverty as a Byproduct of the War Economy Shailly Gupta Barnes (Kairos Center and Poor Peoples Campaign);
Starving Public Health -Deborah Burger (National Nurses United);
Unmet Housing Needs – MA State Rep Mike Connolly;
Weapons Budgets Undermined the Pandemic Response- Jonathan King (MIT & Fund Healthcare not Warfare).
2:55 pm Break.
3:05 pm  First Set of Breakouts (See Details)
4:00 pm Keynote Addresses:
Archbishop of Santa Fe John C. Wester
Jeremy Corbyn (invited)
Representative Ayanna Pressley (Invited)
4:30 pm Second Set of Breakouts (See Details)
5:30 pm  Opportunities for Progress (Marcy Winograd, Chair):
Poor People’s Campaign – Rev. Liz Theoharis;
Mobilizing Nurses and Frontline Health Workers  -Sandy Eaton (Mass Nurses and MassCARE);
Broadening our Reach: Medea Benjamin (CodePINK).
Next Steps: Cole Harrison (MAPA)
6:00  pm Adjourn.

Breakouts Details: Two sets, allowing participation in two Breakouts:
Breakouts Group I (3:05 – 4:00 pm):
Advancing Back from the Brink -Dr. Joseph McCabe (GBPSR); Dr. Ira Helfand (PSR). Reporter Susan Entin.
Resisting a New Cold War with China: John Ratliff (Mass Peace Action); Joseph Gerson (Campaign for Peace, Disarmament and Common Security); Wei Yu (CodePINK); Phyllis Bennis (IPS). Reporter-Steve Gallant
Cutting Budgets for Nuclear Weapons– David Borris (CAPA); Paul Shannon (AFSC); Savannah Wooten (People over the Pentagon); Sayre Sheldon (WAND); William Hartung (Quincy Institute). Reporter-Louise Coleman
Addressing the Housing Crises: Build Homes Not Bombs: Jodie Evans (CodePINK); Michael Kane (Alliance of HUD Tenants); Savina Martin (Mass Poor Peoples Campaign); State Rep Mike Connolly; Sr. Linda Bessom ( Pax Christi). Reporter Drew King.
No Wars No Warming: Vernon Walker (CREW-350MA); Ed Aguilar (CPA-PA); Rosalie Anders (MAPA); Teddy Ogborn (CodePINK); Giselle Herzfeld (Rocky Mt Flats Peace Center). Reporter-Pat Hynes
Promoting ND in the Congressional Progressive Caucus and Progressive Organizations – Elaine Scarry (CPDCS); Jackie Cabasso (Mayors for Peace); Vicki Elson; Russell Freedman (PDA); Cherrill Spencer (WILPF); Reporter-Cynthia MacBain.
Supporting Veterans: Bonnie Gorman (Veterans for Peace and MAPA); Gerry Condon (Veterans for Peace); Roger Quindell (WI Vets for Peace); Jim Anderson (PANYS). Reporter-Mike Van Elzakker
Contacting Young People Advocating for Peace. Alex Neilly (Northeastern University); Peter Bergel (Oregon); Emma Pike (Nuclear Age Peace Foundation); Emily Rubino (PANYS); Calla Walsh (MAPA). Reporter Merri Ansara
Breakouts Group II (4:30 – 5:30 pm):
Interplay of Racism and Militarism at Home and Abroad: Rosemary Kean (MAPA) ; Liz Bejjalieh (CAPA); Vaughn Goodwin (MA PPC); Jeff Klein (Dorchester People for Peace); Reporter –Bonnie Gorman
Promoting the TPNW within the US – Timmon Wallis (Nuclear Ban -US); Dave Pack (Peace Action Kansas City); Sally Jones (PANYS); Molly McGinity (IPPNW);Ray Acheson (WILPF). Reporter Kathy Malley-Morrison
Promoting Peace Between the Koreas – Colleen Moore (Women Across the DMZ); Mike van Elzakker  (MAPA); Seung Hee Jeon(New England Koreans for Peace); Jeffrey Lewis (Middlebury Institute) Reporter-Joseph Gerson
Pressing for Negotiations in Ukraine – Marcy Winograd (CODEPINK); Susan Mirsky (MAPA); Phyllis Bennis (IPS); Cole Harrison (MAPA) Frances Jeffries (Rotary). Reporter- Danaka Katovich
Divestment and Direct Action focused on the Nuclear Weapons industry – David Swanson & Greta Zarro (World Beyond War); Rev. Paul Dordal (PA); Susi Snyder (Don’t Bank on the Bomb); Shea Lebow (CodePINK); Bill Glassmire (Corvallis Divests from War). Reporter- Paul Shannon.
Working with Nurses, Public Health Professionals and Healthcare Workers -Fund Healthcare not Warfare. Dr. Bob Gould (APHA); Sandy Eaton (MassCARE); Catherine DeLorey (Fund Health not War); Cate Henning (MAPA). Reporter – Anne Cheney.
Campus Education and Organizing- Invest in Minds not Missiles. Prof. Bob Redwine (MIT); Margaret Engel (PANYS), CAPA Student; Luissa Vahedi (Am Public Health Assn); Reporter-Steve Slaner.
Promoting Peace in Municipal and State Legislatures; MA State Rep Carol Doherty; Sen. Jamie Eldridge (Mass Legislature); Tara Currie (Brooklyn for Peace ); Dennis Carlone (Cambridge City Council); Reporter– Cherrill Spencer.
Engaging Communities of Faith /Promoting Pope Francis’ Encyclical -Mike Moran (Pax Christi); Keith Harvey (AFSC)  Sofia Wollman (Peace Action Maine); John Bach (Cambridge Quakers). Reporter- Peter Metz 

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Addressing Climate Emergency for Small Islands States: The case of the Maldives
Monday, January 30
9:00am to 5:00pm
MIT, Building 9-354, 9-354 MIT, at Samuel Tak Lee Building, 105 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge

Global sea levels rise at 3 to 4 millimeters a year; NASA scientists predict that with the current rate of global warming, almost 80% of low-lying island nations such as the Maldives will become uninhabitable by the year 2050. By understanding climate change mitigation, adaptation policies, and advocacy practices by the Maldives and other Small Island Developing States (SIDS), this workshop will discuss potential strategies to tackle current and emerging global climate change challenges for MIT's Climate Initiative.   

Speakers: 
Ms. Thilmeeza Hussain
Special Envoy of the President of the General Assembly. She is the Permanent Representative of the Maldives to the United Nations, concurrent Ambassador of the Maldives to the United States, and non-resident High Commissioner to Canada, posts she assumed in 2019.

Mr. Ali Naseer Mohamed
Former Ambassador to United Nations, Chair of Alliance of Small Island State (AOSIS), Thought leader in crafting solutions of key issues at UNGA, G77 and SIDS Conferences. Led Maldives foreign policy implementation from 2013-2017

**Lecture Series**
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Recanati-Kaplan Talks:  Two Years After Insurrection: A Conversation with Dr. Barbara F. Walter & Farai Chideya
Wednesday, January 4
7 pm ET
Online
RSVP at https://www.92ny.org/event/farai-chideya-and-barbara-f-walter

Since supporters of then President Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, 2021, over 900 people have been charged — from assault, to destruction of government property.

Words like “Insurrection” continue to be featured on news outlets — and after the FBI raid on Trump’s Mar a Lago resort in August, Twitter references to “civil war” jumped 3,000%.

To unpack what is going on — and why — join us for a special conversation with Dr. Walter from the nationally syndicated radio show, Our Body Politic with the host, creator, and award-winning journalist, Farai Chideya.

Dr. Barbara F Walter has over 20 years of experience in the field, and in 2017 she joined the CIA Political Instability Task Force analyzing international data to predict where conflict might happen next. She’s the Rohr Chair of International Affairs at the School of Global Policy & Strategy at the University of California, San Diego and author of the New York Times bestselling book, How Civil Wars Start: And How to Stop Them.

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An Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
Fridays, January 6 through January 27
11:00am to 12:00pm
MIT, Building 32-155, 155 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge
and Online
RSVP at https://calendar.mit.edu/event/introduction_to_nuclear_weapons

Is nuclear war possible? How close have we come? What can be done to prevent it?

These talks are will provide a broad overview of the ways in which nuclear weapons have impacted our world, and the ways in which they may bring it to ruin.

Lecture 1 (1/6): Nuclear weapons design, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, potential biological and societal effects, nuclear winter
Lecture 2 (1/13): The nuclear arms race, nuclear crises, Ukraine and Taiwan, accidental nuclear war
Lecture 3 (1/20): Nuclear proliferation, nuclear coercion, North Korea and Iran
Lecture 4 (1/27): Arms control, risk reduction, prospects for the future

No prerequisites, no homework, not for credit.

Content warning: 1st talk will cover bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with some graphic detail.

Editorial Comment:  This is an MIT Independent Activities Period [IAP] program.  IAP was started by students back in the 60s©™allrights reserved and allowed anyone from a janitor to a professor emeritus to teach a course.  It’s what got me interested in events listing back in the 1970s.

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Beyond Plastics Webinar - Pollution by Chemicals and Plastics: The Stealth Threat to Planetary Health
Thursday, January 12
7pm
Online
RSVP at https://bennington.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJIlfuiorDktHNGKbqS9YQ9YwUf8hLngeUYk

Plastic is a paradox. It is at once the signature material of our age and also one of the greatest environmental and health threats we now face. Its production drives climate change, releasing massive quantities of greenhouse gasses, and during its use and degradation it releases an uninterrupted flow of chemicals and microplastics. Plastics and their additives have been found in every corner of the ecosystem, including human blood. But what is it doing there? It may be too soon to know precisely, but looking at the animal models and the known toxic effects of plasticizing chemicals, researchers can tell us a lot. 

Join Beyond Plastics at 7pm ET on Thursday, January 12 when pediatrician and toxicologist, Dr. Philip J. Landrigan, will summarize what we know, what we don’t know, and what researchers strongly suspect about the impact of plastics on human health and future generations.

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GreenGov Webinar Series — Advancing the Global Sustainable Development Goals in our Personal and Professional Spheres
Friday, January 13
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EST
Online
RSVP at https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=QSiOQSgB1U2bbEf8Wpob3uaZYPQyDmVFlDP599RHvaVUMVdVTU1aVUxWR1BHRzNHUENWWjk0VlpaMi4u

Sustainability & Resilience in the Community, Part 2 – Food Systems (Friday, January 13) — Join Caryn Long Earl, Director, Bureau of Food Distribution, PA Dept. of Agriculture and Jane Clements, CEO, Feeding Pennsylvania, as they discuss food insecurity issues in Pennsylvania, how they have been affected by COVID and inflation over the last few years, and government and non-profit programs trying to address these systemic challenges of hunger.

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Cool as a Cucumber: The food and climate nexus at MIT (an IAP series)
Wednesday, January 18 (More dates through February 1, 2023)
2:00pm to 4:00pm
Please sign up for each session here: https://forms.gle/Cixxmv9m6z7eowUi9

How can the MIT community – with our research, projects, forks, and imagination - create a more just and sustainable food system in the age of climate change?

Sessions 1/2 will be dynamic opportunities to learn about research and design projects happening in and around campus related to food, agriculture, climate change, and justice. You may be asked for your input into how to make a project work on campus or join a conversation around imagining a future initiative. Session 3 will be a hands-on cooking session, where we will learn to cook a climate-friendly meal. More details to follow. Hosted by the MIT Office of Sustainability with partners from across MIT. 

Dates and Times:
January 18, 2-4pm (zoom)
January 25, 2-4pm (zoom)
February 1, 2-4pm (in person, location tbd)

Please sign up for each session here: https://forms.gle/Cixxmv9m6z7eowUi9

We will update anyone on any scheduling changes. Email susyj@mit.edu with any questions.

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NECEC Emerging Trends Series:  Decarbonizing Building Heating
Thursday, January 19
10:00-11:30am
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/necec-emerging-trends-series-decarbonizing-building-heating-tickets-483891330997

One of the toughest barriers to achieving net zero by is how to decarbonize thermal side of energy production (e.g. building heating). Electrification with heat pumps has been proposed as a broadly applicable solution, however electrification may not be a viable solution in many cases., and we need to consider biomass, RNG and/or green-hydrogen based solutions

At this event NECEC will convene leaders in the built environment along with technology experts and developers to discuss the pros and cons of each solution. This will cover a range of low carbon options utilizing many technologies such as (but not limited to) Combined Heat and Power (CHP) and District Energy.. We will also hear from local community representatives about their challenges and which solutions might deliver the best results for EJ communities.

Agenda
10.00 - Welcome remarks-Joe Curtatone, President, NECEC
10:10 - Panel
Mike Bakas, Executive Vice President Ameresco
Dr. David Dvorak, PhD, P.E.; Director, New England Combined Heat and Power Technical Assistance Partnership
Jackie Bliss, Chief Customer officer, Vicinity
Zeyneb Magavi, Co-Executive Director, HEET
Michael Walsh, Founding Partner, Groundwork Data
Moderated by Alistair Pim, Vice President for Innovation and Policy, NECEC
11:10 - Q&A
11:30 - End

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Space Food for the Final Frontier
Thursday, January 19, 2023 at 10:00am to 1:00pm
Friday, January 20, 2023 at 10:00am to 1:00pm
Friday, January 27, 2023 at 10:00am to 1:00pm
MIT, Building 35, 35-308, 127 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge

Humans are returning to the Moon, and eventually Mars! But what will they eat on the way there? What role does food play in the success of a human spaceflight mission? With more humans embarking upon longer space missions, astronauts are no longer just concerned with eating; they want to eat well. Some of the world’s most talented chefs are working with cutting-edge deep tech startups to develop delicious steaks and fine chocolates for the next generation of space travelers. Providing food that meets strict nutritional requirements while being stable in a microgravity environment is no easy feat. Research shows that cooking and eating together strengthens astronauts' mental health and group dynamics, which in turn improves their performance in space. It requires both scientific expertise and creative thinking.

Hear from NASA experts and astronauts, award winning-chocolatiers and space nutrition innovators about the challenges and needs of space food systems for the next era of space exploration. 

Learn about the challenges and innovations in space food for long-duration missions and how food science and culinary experiences are pushing the boundaries to overcome space constraints. And if you're a chocolate lover, you're in luck! We will feature a tasting of Space Truffles created by Astreas—the first commercial space food company—the future of functional foods designed for astronauts

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Computational modeling for clean, reliable, and affordable electricity
Monday, January 23 More dates through January 27, 2023
9:00am to 1:00pm
MIT, Building E51-335, 70 Memorial Drive, Cambridge
Register by January 20. Email Pablo Duenas (pduenas@mit.edu)

This 5-session hands-on learning experience introduces analysis techniques to model and understand the role of electric power systems within a carbon-constrained economy. The massive deployment of intermittent renewables energy resources, the anticipated surge of active demand response and batteries, the development of smart grids, or the reliability of supply are among the critical challenges that must be faced by mathematical models for optimization, analysis, and simulation of complex decision-making processes in electricity systems. Besides a theoretical description of models, the instructors will provide students with a collection of prototypes that will allow them to run study cases and to explore the effect of different mathematical formulations on the outcomes. The use of these models in some real-world applications is also presented.

January 23
Part 0: Why models? Operating and planning under ever-evolving conditions
Part 1: Daily operation under renewable uncertainty
1. Economic dispatch and unit commitment
2. Stochastic unit commitment
January 24
Part 2: Operation planning: getting ready within a year
3. Mid-term hydro-thermal coordination
4. Deterministic and stochastic model
January 25
Part 3: Investing in generation to supply a growing demand
5. Generation expansion planning
6. GenX model: an expansion model for studying low-carbon energy futures
January 26
Part 4: Investing in transmission lines to unlock renewable potential
7. Transmission expansion planning
8. openTEPES model: G&T operation and expansion planning with renewable and storage
January 27
Part 5: Empowering end consumers for a clean and affordable transition
9. A simplified model for scheduling a microgrid
10. DECARB model: enabling buildings responsiveness for decarbonization

Instructors
Andres Ramos – Professor at Universidad Pontificia Comillas, arght@mit.edu
Javier Garcia – Professor at Universidad Pontificia Comillas, javiergg@mit.edu
Pablo Duenas – Research Scientist at MIT Energy Initiative, pduenas@mit.edu
Tim Schittekatte – Research Scientist at MIT Energy Initiative, schtim@mit.edu
 
PREREQUISITES: None (some GAMS/Python familiarity is helpful)
LIMITED: Students welcome to individual sessions

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A Changing Planet Seminar by Sir James Bevan
Tuesday, January 24
6am - 7am EST [11-12pm GMT]
Imperial College, Lecture Theatre 1, Blackett Building, South Kensington Campus, London and
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/a-changing-planet-seminar-by-sir-james-bevan-tickets-483124226567

Nature and biodiversity have traditionally been thought of as part of our rural environment. However, we are realising more the critical role that the natural environment and green infrastructure play in our urban spaces and how they can support better outcomes for people, the environment and the economy. They can also help tackle the climate emergency and get us to Net Zero. The Environment Agency has a central role to play in all of these things. Environment Agency Chief Executive, Sir James Bevan, will talk about the Environment Agency’s work and the role that nature and biodiversity will play in our future cities.

About the speaker:
Sir James Bevan joined the Environment Agency (EA) as Chief Executive in late November 2015. Sir James has had a long career in government. His previous roles include UK High Commissioner to India, Chief Operating Officer at the UK Foreign Office, and as a visiting fellow at the Harvard University Center for International Affairs. He has also held a number of senior posts in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office including in Washington, Paris and Brussels. Sir James has a BA Honours in Social Anthropology from the University of Sussex. He was made a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) in 2006 and was awarded a Knighthood in 2012.
Joining the event

This will be a hybrid event, with the opportunity for Imperial staff and students to attend at one of two campus locations (South Kensington and Silwood Park).

Online
Guests can join the seminar remotely on zoom. Details to be sent to those who register.
The Changing Planet seminar series is run by students and staff on the Science and Solutions for a Changing Planet (SSCP) Doctoral Training Partnership. It offers the chance to hear the latest in understanding, adapting to and mitigating environmental problems, complementing the diversity of environmental research at Imperial College London and beyond. Please be aware that our seminars are recorded. If you do not wish to appear on the recording please alert a member of staff. For any further enquiries regarding the Changing Planet seminar series, please contact us atgrantham.events@imperial.ac.uk.

Sign up to receive the Grantham Institute's Weekly Update email, featuring the latest news and events about climate change and the environment at Imperial.

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MIT AgeLab Aging & Equity Series: Climate Change and Health: Age and Intergenerational Considerations
Friday, January 27
2:00pm
Online
RSVP at https://mit.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_0ottiePNQXq1DsO3AYmssw

featuring Dr. Latrica Best
Children and older people are often the focus of research and policies related to climate change and health. However, previous research and public health endeavors have often examined these two groups in isolation, without fully considering the ways in which climate change is impacting the health of these groups from an intergenerational perspective. This talk will consider the importance of age in discussions regarding climate change and highlight the need to incorporate intergenerational approaches to climate-related health inequities. Join the MIT AgeLab in this IAP session in hearing from Dr. Best! 

**Events**
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SEA-CO2 Seminar: Sensing Exports of Anthropogenic Carbon through Ocean Observation, an upcoming ARPA-E program on mCDR MRV technology development
Monday, January 9
11:00 AM - 12:00 PM
MIT, Building 3-370, 33 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge

Presenters: Simon Freeman (ARPA-E) & Daniel Rogers (ARPA-E)

This seminar is an outreach effort seeking to inform the ocean sciences and sensor development community about ARPA-E and the upcoming SEA-CO2 program. This program seeks to accelerate the development of the marine Carbon Dioxide Removal (mCDR) industry through the development of Measurement, Reporting and Validation (MRV) technologies.

More information at https://calendar.mit.edu/event/sea-co2_seminar_sensing_exports_of_anthropogenic_carbon_through_ocean_observation_an_upcoming_arpa-e_program_on_mcdr_mrv_technology_development#.Y6izMy2ZOiI

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Gaming Climate Change: Challenges and More Challenges
Tuesday, January 10
6:00 PM – 8:00 PM EST
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/gaming-climate-change-challenges-and-more-challenges-tickets-415467844507

Ed McGrady will discuss climate change gaming for professional use and the associated challenges.
Georgetown University Wargaming Society
Climate change games are often a welcome break from our natural focus on games of war and destruction. However they present significant challenges to the aspiring designer. These challenges can be divided into those of mechanics, science, and culture. But, wait, a lot of these challenges may not be what you expect! The challenge with mechanics is being able to represent in the game everything you need to represent in order to allow the players to address climate issues. It's a lot. The challenge with science is not that you do not have it, rather its the large abundance of science you do have, your ability to distill it down into something manageable, and the need to get disparate climate change experts to agree on something. Finally, the culture of climate change advocacy, politics, and processes does have a huge impact on your ability to design the game. But not because of climate deniers, rather the culture of the climate science and response community can itself present challenges. This can even extend to your own workforce. All of these challenges can be overcome, but for those of us seeking to build simulation games, vice “toy” or “educational” games, these challenges can present a big barrier to successful climate change game design. This talk will discuss each of these issues, from the perspective of someone who has had to address them, and overcome them (sometimes surrender to them), in multiple climate simulation games. When possible I will offer solutions, at least solutions I have found useful.

Dr. ED McGrady, Principal, MonksHood Media LLC, Senior Adjunct at CNAS
Dr. McGrady writes, speaks, and teaches on the design of professional games. He is an adjunct senior fellow in gaming at CNAS, teaches and manages game design courses for MORS/Virginia Tech, and runs a business devoted to using games and game techniques to bring innovative experiences in new areas. His recent book, Roll to Save: Gaming Disease Response, describes designing games in support of public health professionals. In the past Dr. McGrady built and directed a team of 10-20 analysts at CNA devoted to the design and execution of professional games. Dr. McGrady has deployed as an analyst with US Forces in Haiti during operation Uphold Democracy, onboard USS Nimitz for Desert Storm and with operational E-2C squadrons. Dr. McGrady holds a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering from the University of Michigan. He has published extensively and is widely cited for his work on the mathematics of aggregation and fragmentation.

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Accelerate to Net Zero Europe: The Carbon Trust Event Series
Wednesday, January 11
3am - 5:30am [9:00 AM – 11:30 AM CET]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/accelerate-to-net-zero-europe-the-carbon-trust-event-series-tickets-451747497927

Accelerate to Net Zero: Europe live event will share insights and discussion on the challenges and opportunities ahead as we accelerate efforts to reach for Net Zero. 
Learn from climate leaders in your region and be inspired to take action in your organisation. Join us to learn more about:
How to develop a plan for your organisation to reach Net Zero
How to seize the business opportunities from the climate transition
How to be prepared for a low-carbon future

Join the decision makers looking to align with Net Zero. Confirmed speakers include representative from Carlsberg, Ørsted, RISE, BASF, the European Commission and more. Discover the full agenda at https://assets.foleon.com/eu-west-2/uploads-7e3kk3/48218/eu_agenda_a2n0.4f9f3ee783a6.pdf

We're pleased to offer subtitles in 27+ languages.
Please note this event is for Carbon Trust clients and stakeholders only and is not suitable for consultancies or competitors. We reserve the right to decline your registration in order to ensure an appropriate event audience.

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Harvard Climate Justice Design Fellowship Virtual Showcase
Wednesday, January 11
12:00 PM EST
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/harvard-climate-justice-design-fellowship-virtual-showcase-tickets-495251850617

What does the landscape of climate injustice look like across the United States?

Join us for a virtual project showcase of the inaugural Climate Justice Design Fellowship of the Harvard University Climate+Data Initiative. The projects of the seven fellows explore stories of climate displacement, impacts of hazardous waste contamination, opportunities to build adaptive infrastructure, visions for urban futures, and other aspects of environmental justice from around the country.

The CJDF fellows are leaders in civil society and government institutions in Portland, OR; New Orleans, LA; Philadelphia, PA; Los Angeles, CA; Ann Arbor, MI; Washington, DC; Philadelphia, PA; and Harlem, NY. They have powerful insight into the most important issues facing these diverse locales. Supported by scholars and engineers from the Harvard University Institute for Quantitative Social Science, Graduate School of Design, and Salata Institute, their work uses the tools of data, design, and web technology to analyze patterns, visualize effects, and share individual stories of historical decisions, present day injustice, and alternative futures in a changing climate.
Please register to access the link to the livestream.

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US Green Building Council-LA Net Zero Accelerator Demo Day & Expo
Thursday, January 12
9am - 11:30am EST [12:00 PM – 2:30 PM PST]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/usgbc-la-net-zero-accelerator-demo-day-expo-tickets-465362019327

Let's jump into 2023 with inspiration, innovation, and action!
This annual event is one of our most compelling, featuring live and interactive demonstrations from our NZA 2023 cohort, updates from NZA alumni, and an intro to companies in our SoCal CleanTech Express program with the Consulate General of Canada. A panel discussion on "Sustainable ROI" with investors partners will follow our opening keynote, and we'll wrap up with interactive, virtual breakouts for solution-focused deep dives as well as future opportunities to connect directly on pilot projects via our first-ever Flight Manual. 

Save the date for Thursday, January 12, 2023 from 12p - 2p PST with extended networking from 2p to 2:30p PST and start your new year inspired!

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American Perceptions of Climate Change (IAP Workshop)
Thursday, January 12
10:00am to 11:30am
Online
RSVP at https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScrLcUn0Zm2DxJTgXsCz1vM_jecm6zPw82rKX8TNxJYfMUxDQ/viewform

Over 50% of Americans are worried about climate change – but why is the rest of the country not? Are they duped by misinformation and corporate propaganda... and/or is there something else going on? And how do we get more Americans to support action on climate change?

In this workshop, we will review academic literature and real-world projects on understanding and engaging with Americans across the ideological spectrum on the topic of climate change. 

Weaving presentation and discussion, we will draw upon learnings from the fields of political science, psychology, sociology, and communications to unpack how – and why – Americans think the way they do about climate change and how to effectively engage them on science and solutions. 

Led by Laur Hesse Fisher, Program Director, MIT Environmental Solutions Initiative (ESI). She leads ESI's program on climate change engagement and communication, which includes a journalism fellowship, the MIT Climate Portal, the MIT Climate Primer and TILclimate podcast. She also is the Lead for Learning & Assessment at DEPLOY/US, an organization working to elevate climate leadership in the political right-of-center.

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What Magic Can Teach Us About Misinformation
Friday, January 13
12 – 1 p.m.
Online
RSVP at https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07ejj7s4sid7ee6b90&oseq=&c=&ch=

SPEAKER(S) Introduction: Carmel Shachar, Executive Director, Petrie-Flom Center
Moderator: Stephen P. Wood, MS, ACNP-BC. Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School: Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology and Bioethics
Jeanette Andrews, Magician, Artist, and Speaker (Affiliate Alumni, metaLAB (at) Harvard)
Dr. Ross McKinney, Chief Scientific Officer and Senior Medical Scientist, Association of American Medical Colleges
Jay Olson, PhD, Behavioural Science Fellow, Government of Canada

This panel joins together the fields of medicine, magic, and ethics. We will explore how misinformation and disinformation about health is created and spread, and how expectation violation theory, a theory of communication that analyzes how individuals respond to unanticipated violations of social norms and expectations, can help to counteract these narratives. The panel will also discuss what can be learned from magicians, who are often seen as ethical disinformation designers. Panelists will point to how magic acts as fertile ground to approach the topics of misinformation and disinformation in safe, gentle ways. Finally, we will dive into how illusions shed light on the larger implications of neuroethics and epistemic injustice in the future.

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Small-Scale Agricultural Climate Resiliency 
Tuesday, January 17
1:00pm to 2:00pm
MIT, Building E51, E51-376, 70 Memorial Drive, Cambridge

Sarah Coughlin (J-PAL)
Jack Ellington (J-PAL) 

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How Low-Carbon Ammonia Can Help Fight Climate Change
Wednesday, January 18
12 - 1pm
Online
RSVP at https://columbiauniversity.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6DOoY4VnS56q1eaCpUiP1g

Modern society depends on ammonia (NH3), a chemical compound that plays a central role in modern agriculture, delivering nitrogen essential for soil fertility. Ammonia is also a key feedstock in plastics, rubber, and other products. 

Current methods for  making ammonia produce significant carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions—almost 2% of the global total. Low-carbon production methods can dramatically reduce these emissions. Low-carbon production of ammonia also creates a fuel that could help decarbonize a range of sectors.

In November, a team including several scholars from the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs released the ICEF Low-Carbon Ammonia Roadmap, which explores a number of topics including low-carbon ammonia production options, infrastructure needs, potential uses for low-carbon ammonia, and policy options. 

Please join us for a discussion with the report’s co-authors as they present their findings and recommendations. 

Moderator:
David Sandalow, Inaugural Fellow, Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia SIPA and Chair, ICEF Innovation Roadmap Project
Panelists:
Zhiyuan Fan, Ph.D. student and Research Associate, Columbia University
Dr. Julio Friedmann, Chief Scientist and Chief Carbon Wrangler, Carbon Direct
Ann-Kathrin Merz, Industry Analyst, First Ammonia and Research Assistant, Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia SIPA

This webinar will be hosted via Zoom. Advance registration is required. Upon registration, you will receive a confirmation email with access details. The event will be recorded and the video recording will be added to our website following the event.
 
This event is open to press, and registration is required to attend. For media inquiries or requests for interviews, please contact Natalie Volk (nv2388@columbia.edu).
 
For more information about the event, please contact energypolicyevents@columbia.edu

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The State of Carbon Dioxide Removal - Report launch
Thursday, January 19
11am - 12:30pm [16:00 – 17:30 GMT]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-state-of-carbon-dioxide-removal-report-launch-registration-450547779537

Join us at the launch of a significant new report, The State of Carbon Dioxide Removal – a first-of-its kind, independent, scientific assessment, tracking the development of Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) globally.

At this launch event, lead authors will discuss key findings from the report. They will present the global state of CDR development, tracking progress on its scale up, public perceptions, policies and innovation.

After short presentations, the authors will be joined by expert contributors and will answer audience Q&A.
Presenting authors:
Oliver Geden, German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP)
Jan Minx, Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change (MCC)
 Gregory Nemet, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Steve Smith, University of Oxford
Special guest speaker:
Jen Wilcox, US Department of Energy
The event will be chaired by Catherine Brahic, Environment Editor at The Economist.

To find out more about the report and receive a copy of the report directly to your inbox on 19 January, visit our website. 
Organised in collaboration with CO2RE, the Greenhouse Gas Removal Hub.
Please note that this is an online only event. You will be sent a Zoom link ahead of the event.

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Homelessness in The United States: Context, Scope, and Approaches
Friday, January 20
10:00am to 11:00am
MIT, Building E51, E51-376, 70 Memorial Drive, Cambridge

Sara van Nes (J-PAL)
Anisha Sehgal (J-PAL)

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LDEO Earth Science Colloquium Dr. Jade D'Alpoim Guedes
Friday, January 20
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Online 
RSVP at https://events.columbia.edu/cal/event/showEventMore.rdo;jsessionid=8RZ92sjI5W2sOTWU8-tUEmJsFx_jbYe9n4oillMD.calprdapp06

Dr. Jade Alpoim Guedes, Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology and at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego.
Dr. D’Alpoim Guedes is an environmental archaeologist and ethnobiologist who employs an interdisciplinary research program to understand how humans adapted their foraging practices and agricultural strategies to new environments and have developed resilience in the face of climatic and social change. 

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At Home on an Unruly Planet: Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth, with Madeline Ostrander
Tuesday, January 24
6 - 7pm
Online
RSVP at https://boston-public-library.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_fS3mJifISJyjUDikGPpfKA

As part of the Boston Public Library's Central Author Talk Series, science journalist and author Madeline Ostrander will discuss her recently published book At Home on an Unruly Planet: Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth as part of the Boston Public Library's theme of climate justice activism. Acting as interlocutor for this conversation is Greg M. Epstein, Humanist chaplain at Harvard and MIT, Convener for Ethical Life at MIT's Office of Religious, Spiritual, and Ethical Life, and New York Times bestselling author. Following their discussion, there will be time for audience Q&A.

Porter Square Books will be supplying books for this event, and all books ordered through them will come with a bookplate signed by the author. Order at https://www.portersquarebooks.com/book/9781250620514, and put in BPLEVENT23 as a coupon code in your order.

About the book
From rural Alaska to coastal Florida, a vivid account of Americans working to protect the places they call home in an era of climate crisis.

How do we find a sense of home and rootedness in a time of unprecedented upheaval? What happens when the seasons and rhythms in which we have built our lives go off-kilter?

Once a distant forecast, climate change is now reaching into the familiar, threatening our basic safety and forcing us to reexamine who we are and how we live. In At Home on an Unruly Planet—a book lauded as "marvelous" by bestselling author Bill McKibben and a work of "searching intelligence and uncommon empathy" by Pulitzer prize-winner Elizabeth Kolbert—science journalist Madeline Ostrander reflects on this crisis not as an abstract scientific or political problem but as a palpable force that is now affecting all of us at home. 

Ostrander offers vivid accounts of people fighting to protect places they love from increasingly dangerous circumstances. A firefighter works to rebuild her town after catastrophic western wildfires. A Florida preservationist strives to protect one of North America's most historic cities from rising seas. An urban farmer struggles to transform a California city plagued by fossil fuel disasters. An Alaskan community heads for higher ground as its land erodes.

She pairs deeply reported stories of hard-won optimism with lyrical essays on the strengths we need in an era of crisis. The book is required reading for anyone who wants to make a home in the twenty-first century.

“A hopeful, urgent, and universal message about our collective ability to face the climate changes we can no longer ignore.”
—Kirkus starred review

About the author
Madeline Ostrander is a science journalist and the author of At Home on an Unruly Planet: Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth. Her work has appeared in the NewYorker.com, The Nation, Sierra Magazine, PBS's NOVA Next, Slate, and numerous other outlets. Her reporting on climate change and environmental justice has taken her to locations such as the Alaskan Arctic and the Australian outback. She's received grants, fellowships, and residencies from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, Artist Trust, the USC Annenberg Center for Health Journalism, the Fund for Investigative Journalism, the Jack Straw Cultural Center, the Mesa Refuge, Hedgebrook, and Edith Cowan University in Australia. She is the former senior editor of YES! magazine and holds a master's degree in environmental science from the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She lives in Seattle with her husband. To learn more, please visit her website: https://madelineostrander.com/.

About the interlocutor
Greg M. Epstein serves as the Humanist Chaplain at Harvard University, as well as the president of the Harvard Chaplains, Harvard University’s corps of over forty chaplains from more than 20 different religious, spiritual, and ethical traditions. Greg also serves the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) as humanist chaplain and as Convener for Ethical Life at the MIT Office of Religious, Spiritual, and Ethical Life. For nearly two decades, he has built a unique career as one of the world’s most prominent humanist chaplains—professionally trained members of the clergy who support the ethical and communal lives of nonreligious people. To learn more, visit this link: https://linktr.ee/gregmepstein.

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U.N. Perspective Series: Clean Water & Sanitation
Wednesday, January 25
5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
The Foundry, 101 Rogers Street, Cambridge
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/un-perspective-series-clean-water-sanitation-tickets-473414444347

The U.N. Perspective Series are free events aiming to build community and convene global and local perspectives on the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Presented by the United Nations Association of Greater Boston (UNAGB), each U.N. Perspective Series focuses on a specific SDG and opens dialogue between global experts, local leaders, and the Greater Boston community.

This January, in anticipation of the 2023 UN Water Conference in New York next March, we will be focusing on SDG 6: Clean Water & Sanitation to learn from leaders, both local and global, who are championing water equity in the Boston community and beyond.

UN Water shares that “water is inextricably linked to the three pillars of sustainable development, and it integrates social, cultural, economic and political values. It is crosscutting and supports the achievement of many SDGs through close linkages with climate, energy, cities, the environment, food security, poverty, gender equality and health, amongst others. With climate change profoundly affecting our economies, societies and environment, water is indeed the biggest deal breaker to achieve the internationally agreed water-related goals and targets, including those contained in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”

This event is free, but registration is required. Please note that the event is open to all ages, but the lecture is tailored to adult audiences.

Meet Our Panel:
Our panel of experts is still being determined. Check back in soon!

Agenda:
5:00-5:45pm: Networking and Registration
5:45-6:45pm: Panel Q+A Facilitated by Youth Moderator
6:45-7:00pm: Open Networking
7:00pm: End of Event

Interested in sponsoring this event or the U.N. Perspective Series?
Reach out to UNAGB’s Director of Development, Alex Bostian, at alex.bostian@unagb.org to learn more.

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Democracy and peace at stake? The rise of geo-strategy in energy transition
Wednesday, January 25
12pm - 2pm EST [18:00 – 20:00 CET]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/democracy-and-peace-at-stake-the-rise-of-geo-strategy-in-energy-transition-tickets-481550018067

Join us for Olivia Lazard's NGO Academy Online Keynote on the ecological and geopolitical implications of the ongoing energy transition!
What are the ecological and geopolitical implications of the worldwide ongoing energy transition and industrial revolution? Will the energy transition really lead to a more peaceful world? There are reasons to question this assumption. As the world races to extract more mineral resources needed for clean and digital techs, the reality is that geo-economic forces keen on upending the rules based order are at work. They come from various geographies, although a lot of them tend to arise from China and Russia. The extraction revolution at the heart of the industrial process to create the clean tech economy is often connected to highly corrupt and predatory behaviours that threaten the stability of countries at the heart of the scramble for resources, and by the same token, threaten the integrity and solidity of democratic societies. 

The keynote will give a global picture of what is at play, and some of the threats unleashing at present and looming on the horizon. This will provide the basis for a discussion over how these threats may impact regions like the Balkans, Central and Eastern Europe. 

Olivia Lazard is a visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe. Her research focuses on the geopolitics of climate, the transition ushered by climate change, and the risks of conflict and fragility associated to climate change and environmental collapse. Lazard is an environmental peacemaking and mediation practitioner as well as a researcher. With an original specialization in the political economy of conflicts, she has worked for various NGOs, the UN, the EU, and donor states in the Middle East, Latin America, Sub-Saharan and North Africa, and parts of Asia. In her fieldwork, her focus was to understand how globalization and the international political economy shaped patterns of violence and vulnerability patterns as well as how they formed new types of conflict systems that our international governance architecture has difficulty tackling with agility. It is also through fieldwork that she came to observe the ways in which the plundering of ecosystems feeds conflict systems across the world and contributes to climate disruptions. Prior to joining Carnegie Europe, Lazard set up her own consultancy firm, Peace in Design Consulting, which remains exclusively active in conflict and fragile zones.

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US Nuclear Weapons Accidents: A Brief History and the Evolution of Response
Thursday, January 26
1:00pm
MIT, Building E40-496 Pye Conference Room, 1 Amherst Street, Cambridge

Abstract:  Officially, there have been more than 30 accidents involving US Nuclear Weapon since 1945 (but none since 1980!). How do these happen? What types of controls are in place to prevent or mitigate them? How does the US Government respond to these incidents? During this session, we will use historical examples (Damascus, AR Accident and others), and draw on personal experiences, to examine this important topic.

Speaker:  John D. Turner  
Lieutenant Colonel John Turner earned his BS in American Politics with a Minor in Nuclear Engineering from The United States Military Academy. Commissioned in 2002, Lt Col Turner has held various staff and leadership positions within the Department of Defense, including three combat tours as a Field Artillery Officer before transitioning to his current role as a Nuclear and Counter WMD Officer. Other notable assignments include time spent at Headquarters, US European Command and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. John earned his Master of Business Administration from the College of William and Mary and a graduate certificate in Nuclear Weapons Effects, Policy, and Proliferation from the Air Force Institute of Technology. Prior to MIT, John served as a Policy and Plans Officer at Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) at Ft. Bragg, NC.

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Brian Eno and Donna Grantis: Arts’ Role in the Climate Crisis
Friday, January 27
1pm - 2pm EST [12:00 PM – 1:00 PM CST]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/brian-eno-and-donna-grantis-arts-role-in-the-climate-crisis-tickets-466594485667

A talk with Brian Eno and Canadian guitarist Donna Grantis as they grapple with this moment and arts' role in tackling climate change.

British musician, producer, and artist Brian Eno is a fierce advocate for our collective future in the midst of climate change.
Eno recently shared with Pitchfork, “I’m more and more convinced that our only hope of saving our planet is if we begin to have different feelings about it: perhaps if we became re-enchanted by the amazing improbability of life; perhaps if we suffered regret and even shame at what we’ve already lost; perhaps if we felt exhilarated by the challenges we face and what might yet become possible. Briefly, we need to fall in love again, but this time with Nature, with Civilisation and with our hopes for the future.”
He founded EarthPercent to direct funding to the frontlines of climate justice while reducing the environmental impact of the music industry as a way for artists and music organizations to pledge a percentage of their income to support combating the climate crisis.

Join us for a conversation between Brian Eno and EarthPercent member and Canadian guitarist Donna Grantis (Prince, 3rdeyegirl) as they grapple with this moment and the arts’ role in tackling climate change.

About the panelists: 
Brian Eno - musician, producer, visual artist, and activist first came to international prominence in the early 70s as a founding member of British band, Roxy Music, followed by a series of solo albums and collaborations. His work as producer includes albums with Talking Heads, Devo, U2, Laurie Anderson, James, Jane Siberry, and Coldplay, while his long list of collaborations include recordings with David Bowie, Jon Hassell, Harold Budd, John Cale, David Byrne, Grace Jones, Karl Hyde, James Blake, and recently with his brother, Roger, on Mixing Colours. In August 2021, they performed together for the very first time, to a rapturous audience at the Acropolis in Athens. 

Brian Eno’s visual experiments with light and video continue to parallel his musical career, with exhibitions and installations all over the globe. To date he has released more than 40 albums of his own music and exhibited extensively, as far afield as the Venice Biennale, St. Petersburg’s Marble Palace, Ritan Park in Beijing, Arcos de Lapa in Rio de Janeiro, and the sails of the Sydney Opera House. He is a founding member of the Long Now Foundation, a trustee of Client Earth and patron of Videre est Credere. In April 2021, he launched EarthPercent, which raises money from the music industry for some of the most impactful environmental charities working on the climate emergency.
His latest album, ‘FOREVERANDEVERNOMORE’ was released on October 14, 2022.

Donna Grantis is an artist, guitarist, and composer from Toronto. From 2012 to 2016 she performed and recorded with Prince as a member of his funk-rock trio 3RDEYEGIRL, and supergroup New Power Generation. In 2019, Grantis fronted a 5-piece electric jazz quintet and released her critically acclaimed debut album, DIAMONDS & DYNAMITE. She was named one of the greatest female guitarists of all time by Guitar Player Magazine. 

Her newest creative project, Culture vs Policy, fuses the emotive power of music with thought-provoking dialogue about the climate and ecological crises. In collaboration with climate scientists, activists, Indigenous leaders, policymakers, researchers, and sociologists, Grantis seeks to highlight in her art narratives that are at once existential and empowering. She aims to utilize sound to evoke feelings in the listener, while exploring how we relate to human impacts on planet Earth.

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Interspecies Attentiveness: An Artist Panel Discussion
Thursday, February 2
6:00pm to 7:30pm
MIT,  Bartos Theater, 20 Ames Street Building E15, Cambridge
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/interspecies-attentiveness-an-artist-panel-discussion-tickets-484363292647

Alan Michelson, Špela Petrič, and Miriam Simun, exhibiting artists in Symbionts: Contemporary Artists and the Biosphere, will convene in a panel discussion exploring interspecies communication and symbiosis.

Whether it is trees offering nectar to tempt bees (Simun), tobacco and its role in human ritual (Michelson), or plants and their gardeners (Petrič), many species engage with the vegetal and offer a form of what Petrič calls “vegetal consciousness.” Exhibition curators Natalie Bell and Caroline A. Jones will guide the discussion to explore human collaborations with varied species and the role of digital media and technologies in facilitating our exploration and pursuit of these ways of knowing, thinking, or communicating beyond the human.

Access the livestream on Thursday, February 2 from 6–7:30 PM EDT. Video recording will with Closed Captions will be available at a later date.  

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Wikipedia edit-a-thon on climate change
Friday, February 3
1:00pm to 3:00pm
MIT, Building 14, 14N-132 (DIRC), 160 Memorial Drive, Cambridge
RSVP at https://libcal.mit.edu/calendar/events/wikipedia_iap2023

Wikipedia is now 22 years old and is the largest encyclopedia ever written, providing a free and reliable reference on hundreds of thousands of topics. But it's still incomplete! Come learn how the collaborative website works and how to make contributions. We'll cover how to make edits and improve articles and read Wikipedia with a critical eye, with a focus on climate change information. Articles related to climate change range from articles about technology, to policy and laws, to impacts on particular geographies or environments. We'll go over some areas to get started, how to work with other editors interested in this topic, tips for using the libraries to find reliable sources, and some considerations for writing scientific articles on Wikipedia.

No prior experience with Wikipedia is needed, and contributions in languages other than English are welcome. We will start with a tutorial and overview, and then use the second half of the workshop for hands-on work. Use the computers in the room, or bring your laptop. 

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Housing as a Climate Lever, with Scott Wiener
Monday, February 6 
3pm EST [6:00 PM PST]
The Commonwealth Club of California, 110 The Embarcadero, Taube Family Auditorium, San Francisco and
Online
RSVP at https://commonwealthclub.secure.force.com/ticket/?&_ga=2.248747970.417910296.1671998998-149928173.1643172478#/instances/a0F3j00001c6MuwEAE
Cost:  $5

California’s attempt to increase housing and reduce carbon pollution is upsetting the power balance between local and state officials. With new laws empowering Sacramento to require more home construction, cities and counties are scrambling to decide what to build where. It’s getting messy and fraying friendships and alliances. 

Would you agree to increased housing density in your neighborhood? How about in the next neighborhood over? Infill development that increases urban density tends to decrease reliance on cars and cut carbon footprints. At the same time, multi-story apartments in urban cores usually cost more per square foot to build than one or two-story houses where land is cheaper. So how do we balance environmental concerns with “neighborhood preservation”? How do racial exclusion and displacement play into the situation? 
Join Climate One Host Greg Dalton in conversation with California State Senator Scott Wiener, followed by a panel discussion, as we unpack the connections between housing, climate and justice.

Monday, November 28, 2022

Energy (and Other) Events Monthly - December 2022

 **Conferences**


TEDxMIT:  What Defines a Mind?
Sunday, December 4

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**Lecture Series**

Economic Diversification in Nigeria: The Politics of Building a Post-Oil Economy
Thursday, December 1

Beyond Data: Reclaiming Human Rights at the Dawn of the Metaverse
Thursday, December 1

Susan Chomba: Will Ongoing Grand Restoration Schemes Reverse or Accelerate Biodiversity Loss?
Thursday, December 1

Bradford Seminar: “Critical Data Gaps in Climate Change Adaptation Modeling”
Monday, December 5

Inside Putin's Head: The Threat of Nuclear Strike in Ukraine
Monday, December 5

HMEI Faculty Seminar: “The Urbasphere: How Humans, Infrastructure and Nature Shape the Emerging Environment of Cities”
Tuesday, December 6

Jewish Climate Action Network Webinars:
Decarbonizing
Wednesday, December 7
&
Calculating Your Energy Benchmark
Tuesday, December 13

Climate Change and Health Equity
Thursday, December 8

Transforming Policy, Procurement & Data to Achieve Carbon-Free Electricity in New England
Friday, December 9

MIT Starr Forum: Energy as a Weapon of War: Russia, Ukraine, and Europe in Challenging Times
Friday, December 9

Earthquakes and the End Times: Global Disasters and Apocalyptic Predictions in the Early Modern English Atlantic
Tuesday, December 13

A Changing Planet Seminar: Going Circular: Addressing Climate Change through Circular Development
Wednesday, December 14

An Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
Fridays, January 6 through January 27, 2023

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**Events**

Keeping the (Decarbonized) Lights On: US Housing, Equity, and the Energy Transition
Friday, December 2

Hurricanes and Breezes: Visualizing Climate Change
Friday, December 2

Peter Zeihan: Mapping the Collapse of Globalization
Friday, December 2 

The Appallingly Bad (Neoclassical) Economics of Climate Change
Sunday, December 4

Rocky Mountain Institute Discussion — How Can We Accelerate Our Clean Energy Future?
Tuesday, December 6 

Are Industry Regulators Ready for the Climate Transition?
Tuesday, December 6

The 2022 Climate Risk Scorecard: Assessing U.S Financial Regulator Action
Tuesday, December 6

Farmers-Scientists panel on Climate-Smart Agriculture
Wednesday, December 7

And on His Farm He Had..A Photovoltaic System? Where Solar and Farming Meet
Wednesday, December 7

Cyber Negotiations: The Case of Ransomware
Wednesday, December 7

Farming + Fresh Water - "Solving Complex Problems" (12.000) Final Presentation
Wednesday, December 7

After Biden-Xi Handshake: Is U.S.-China Climate Collab About to Heat Up?
Wednesday, December 7

Greta Thunberg in conversation with Naomi Klein
Thursday, December 8

Stefan Rahmstorf: 2022 Stephen H. Schneider Award for Outstanding Climate Science Communication
Friday, December 9 

Nature-Based Adaptation: Getting to Scale
Friday, December 9 

Zaporizhzhia: Facing the Dangers of Nuclear Plants in War and Peace   
Sunday, December 11 

Environmental Destruction: The Effects of War, Pollution & Capital
Wednesday, December 14

Great Decisions with Rachel Kyte | Climate Change
December 14

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These kinds of events below are happening all over the world every day and most of them, now, are webcast and archived, sometimes even with accurate transcripts. Would be good to have a place that helped people access them. 

This is a more global version of the local listings I did for about a decade (what I did and why I did it at http://hubeventsnotes.blogspot.com/2013/11/what-i-do-and-why-i-do-it.html) until September 2020 and earlier for a few years in the 1990s (https://theworld.com/~gmoke/AList.index.html).  

A more comprehensive global listing service could be developed if there were enough people interested in doing it, if it hasn’t already been done.  

If anyone knows of such a global listing of open energy, climate, and other events is available, please put me in contact.

Thanks for reading,

Solar IS Civil Defense,
George Mokray
gmoke@world.std.com

http://hubeventsnotes.blogspot.com - notes on lectures and books
http://solarray.blogspot.com - renewable energy and efficiency - zero net energy links list
http://cityag.blogspot.com - city agriculture links list
http://geometrylinks.blogspot.com - geometry links list
http://hubevents.blogspot.com - Energy (and Other) Events
http://www.dailykos.com/user/gmoke/history - articles, ideas, and screeds

**Conferences**

TEDxMIT:  What Defines a Mind?
Sunday, December 4
2:45 pm till 6:45 pm
MIT, Stata Center
RSVP at https://tedx.mit.edu/resgister-dec4

More information at https://tedx.mit.edu

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**Lecture Series**

Economic Diversification in Nigeria: The Politics of Building a Post-Oil Economy
Thursday, December 1
10:00 am to 11:00 am
Online
RSVP at https://bostonu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_66HYAcxuSziTQxckqlv96g

Nigeria has for long been regarded as the poster child for the ‘curse’ of oil wealth. Yet, despite this, Nigeria achieved strong economic growth for over a decade in the 21st century, driven largely by policy reforms in non-oil sectors. In “Economic Diversification in Nigeria: The Politics of Building a Post-Oil Economy,” Zainab Usman argues that Nigeria’s major development challenge is not the ‘oil curse’, but rather one of achieving economic diversification beyond oil, subsistence agriculture, informal activities, and across its subnational entities. Through analysis drawing on economic data, policy documents, and interviews, Usman poses that Nigeria’s challenge of economic diversification is situated within the political setting of an unstable distribution of power among the individual, group, and institutional actors.</p> <p>Since the turn of the century, policymaking by successive Nigerian governments has, despite superficial partisan differences, been oriented towards short-term crisis management of macroeconomic stabilization, restoring growth, and selective public sector reforms. To diversify Nigeria’s economy, this book argues that successive governments must reorient towards a consistent focus on pro-productivity and pro-poor policies, alongside comprehensive civil service and security sector overhaul. These policy priorities, Nigeria’s ruling elites are belatedly acknowledging, are crucial to achieving economic transformation; a policy shift that requires a confrontation with the roots of perpetual political crisis, and an attempt to stabilize the balance of power towards equity and inclusion.</p> <p>Join the Global Development Policy Center (GDP Center) for a discussion with Zainab Usman, Senior Fellow and Director of the Africa Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, on her new book. This webinar is part of the Fall 2022 Global Economic Governance Book Talk Series.

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Beyond Data: Reclaiming Human Rights at the Dawn of the Metaverse
Thursday, December 1
11:00am to 12:00pm
Online

Towards Life 3.0: Ethics and Technology in the 21st Century is a talk series organized and facilitated by Dr. Mathias Risse, Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, and Berthold Beitz Professor in Human Rights, Global Affairs, and Philosophy and Sushma Raman, Executive Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy. Drawing inspiration from the title of Max Tegmark’s book, Life 3.0: Being Human in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, the series draws upon a range of scholars, technology leaders, and public interest technologists to address the ethical aspects of the long-term impact of artificial intelligence on society and human life. Please find the registration link below.

Panelist: 
Elizabeth M. Renieris | Founder & CEO, HACKYLAWYER; Technology & Human Rights Fellow, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy
Mathias Risse (Moderator) | Faculty Director, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy
Elizabeth M. Renieris is a law and policy expert focused on data governance and the human rights implications of new and emerging technologies. Elizabeth is the founder & CEO of HACKYLAWYER, a consultancy focused on law and policy engineering, and a Technology & Human Rights Fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School, where she is designing a recalibrated human rights framework for data governance.

A leading authority on digital identity, cross-border data protection and privacy laws (CIPP/E, CIPP/US), and emerging technologies such as blockchain and AI, Elizabeth has advised the World Bank, the U.K. Parliament, and the European Commission, as well as a variety of international organizations and NGOs, on these subjects. She has worked on three continents as a government attorney, outside counsel with two prominent international law firms, and in-house counsel at two digital identity startups, and serves as an advisor to the MIT Computational Law Report. 

Virtual Event Details
This event will be livestreamed on YouTube Live. Attendees registered for this event (link below) will receive a link for the livestream 1 hour before the event where you can participate in the live chat and ask questions during the event.

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Susan Chomba: Will Ongoing Grand Restoration Schemes Reverse or Accelerate Biodiversity Loss?
Thursday, December 1
1:30pm
Boston College
Online
RSVP at https://bccte.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_bxTZLOKPT7WXahg49wN5jw

Dr. Susan Chomba is the Director of Vital Landscapes at the World Resources Institute (WRI). She leads WRI Africa’s work on forest protection and landscape restoration, food systems transformation, water and governance. She is a scientist with extensive research and development experience in more than 20 countries on the continent. Susan is a global ambassador for the Race to zero and Resilience under the UN High-Level Champions for Climate Action. She serves on advisory boards of several organizations and has received several global recognitions for her work, including being named as one of Global Landscapes Forum’s ‘16 Women Restoring the Earth’ in 2021 and one of the top 25 women shaping climate action globally by Greenbiz.

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Bradford Seminar: “Critical Data Gaps in Climate Change Adaptation Modeling”
Monday, December 5
12:15 PM - 1:15 PM
Princeton, 300 Wallace Hall, Princeton, NJ
Andrew Reid Bell, assistant professor of Earth and environment at Boston University, will present “Critical Data Gaps in Climate Change Adaptation Modeling.” This seminar will be held in-person (PUID holders only) and available via livestream (open to all).

Bell will discuss his approach to agent-based modeling — in which system-level outcomes emerge from interactions among individuals and their environment — that captures environmental forcings on migration. He will focus on data gaps in modeling people’s adaptation to climate hazards and shocks such as sea-level rise and the frontier of opportunities for resolving parts of them.

This event is part of the David Bradford Energy and Environmental Policy Seminar Series organized by the Center for Policy Research on Energy and the Environment (C-PREE) in the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs and co-sponsored by the High Meadows Environmental Institute (HMEI).

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Inside Putin's Head: The Threat of Nuclear Strike in Ukraine
Monday, December 5
5:00-6:30 PM 
Online
RSVP at https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07ejgysmgcd1dd9330&oseq=&c=&ch=

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HMEI Faculty Seminar: “The Urbasphere: How Humans, Infrastructure and Nature Shape the Emerging Environment of Cities”
Tuesday, December 6
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM
Princeton, 10 Guyot Hall, Princeton, NJ
Online 

Elie Bou-Zeid, professor of civil and environmental engineering and associated faculty in HMEI, will present “The Urbasphere: How Humans, Infrastructure and Nature Shape the Emerging Environment of Cities” in Guyot Hall, Room 10, and online via Zoom. Bou-Zeid is the final speaker in the fall 2022 HMEI Faculty Seminar Series.

In the past 50 years, the global population living in cities increased from 35% to 55%, and may be nearly 70% by 2050. Urban population density and its associated infrastructure and resource needs create an environment unlike any other on Earth. Understanding and managing the “urbasphere” has never been more urgent as cities emerge as the central stage for confronting global challenges related to climate, population, resources and equity, among others.

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Jewish Climate Action Network Webinars:
Decarbonizing
Wednesday, December 7
7:00 - 8:30 PM (Eastern time)
RSVP at https://www.flipcause.com/secure/event_step2/MTYwNjEz/179930

In this fun webinar, you'll learn how to run a "Decarbonizers" program this year. It's a super-powerful, super-easy, peer-to-peer program, designed to motivate members of YOUR local synagogue/community to substantially reduce carbon in their households. You'll work on the steps, how it fits into climate activism, also the obstacles. Taught by Fred Davis, President of JCAN-MA. He has been a leader, a professional and an advocate in the arena of clean energy since 1978.

This was postponed from November 16th due to unforeseen circumstances.

And

Calculating Your Energy Benchmark
Tuesday, December 13
12:00 - 1:30 PM (Eastern time)
https://www.flipcause.com/secure/event_step2/MTYwNTk1/179888

Calculating your synagogue's "benchmark" -- its carbon footprint -- provides a baseline for ongoing reduction efforts. The methodology is straightforward, all it takes is this webinar and 2-3 hours of concentration. Led by Andrew Webster. Learn how to use the overhauled Bentshmarking spreadsheet MIPL-JCAN Carbon Calculator for Houses of Worship. For years, JCAN has trained green-teams in how to use this tool to calculate the carbon footprint of their synagogue facility.

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Climate Change and Health Equity
Thursday, December 8
12 – 1 p.m.
Online
CONTACT INFO vcp_hpsp@hms.harvard.edu
Questions? Email: vcp_hpsp@hms.harvard.edu

Panelists
Gaurab Basu, MD, MPH
Co-Director, Center for Health Equity Education & Advocacy, Cambridge Health Alliance;
Health Equity Fellow, Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health;
Faculty Affiliate, Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Caleb Dresser, MD
Assistant Director, Climate & Human Health Fellowship; Department of Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center;
Instructor, Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School
Tracey L. Henry, MD, MPH, MS
Associate Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine; Climate and Equity Fellow, Medical Society Consortium on Climate and Health
Thread Director, Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Racial Advocacy, Emory University School of Medicine
Alden Landry, MD, MPH
Assistant Dean, Office for Diversity Inclusion and Community Partnership, Harvard Medical School;
Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

Equity and Social Justice Webinar Series

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Transforming Policy, Procurement & Data to Achieve Carbon-Free Electricity in New England
Friday, December 9
9:00 am-12:30 pm
Foley Hoag LLP 155 Seaport Blvd 17th Floor Boston
and Livestreaming 
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/12922-transforming-policy-procurement-data-to-achieve-cfe-in-ne-tickets-436614785577
Cost:  $0 - $100

Recent Studies on 24/7 and Emissionality: Time & Location Matching 
Convener/Moderator: Dr. Jonathan Raab, Raab Associates, Ltd.
Dr. Jesse Jenkins, Associate Professor Princeton University
Dr. Kathleen Spees, Principal, Brattle Group
Mark Dyson (invited), Managing Director, CFE Program, RMI

At this Roundtable, we will examine what it will take for New England’s states and other important entities, such as municipalities, universities, customers, utilities, and the federal government, to achieve their carbon-free electricity (CFE) commitments. These commitments come in the form of mandatory federal and state requirements, Renewable Portfolio and Clean Energy Standards, and voluntary purchases by corporations and nonprofits of Renewable and Clean Energy Certificates that match their buyers’ annual electricity consumption. 

While these strategies have resulted in significant carbon emission reductions, they will not be sufficient to achieve a carbon-free electricity system. There is growing recognition that “not all kWhs are created equal.” Electricity-related carbon emissions vary hour by hour (even minute by minute) depending on the power plants that are operating at the time. They also vary by location, based on the mix of generation in the grid or utility system (even down to the circuit) where the customer is located. Carbon free resources that reduce the use of power plants with high levels of emissions, such as coal plants, reduce more carbon than carbon free sources that reduce the use of plants with lower emissions, e.g., natural gas or even renewable generation. Similarly, actions that reduce consumption in “dirtier” systems or grids, reduce more carbon emissions than actions in a “cleaner” system

As a result, customers, producers, policymakers and researchers are looking more closely at matching consumption with CFE by time and location. The two strategies currently receiving the most attention are, 1) procuring CFE on a 24/7 hourly matching basis; and 2) procuring electricity based on its “emissionality,” a practice that targets emissions where and when they are highest. 

This panel will present three ground-breaking studies on what it will take to achieve CFE and whether 24/7 hourly matching or emissionality will be a more effective strategy (theoretically) or equally effective (practically).

Changing Policies, Procurements, and Data to Achieve Time & Location Matching
Guest Moderator: Janet Gail Besser
Tanuj Deora (invited), Director, Clean Energy, White House CEQ
Dr. Caroline Golin, Global Head, Energy Market, Development & Policy, Google
Misti Groves, VP Market & Policy Innovation, CEBA & CEBI
Mason Emnett, Senior VP Policy Constellation
Neil Fisher, Partner, Northbridge

Whether focusing on 24/7 hourly matching or emissionality, changes in policies, procurement practices and data access will be needed to achieve CFE. 

On December 8, 2021, the Biden-Harris Administration issued an Executive Order requiring 100 percent CFE by 2030 for all federal buildings and facilities--at least half of which must be locally supplied clean energy to match 24/7 hourly demand. In August 2022, the White House Council on Environmental Quality provided initial implementing instructions, with additional guidance forthcoming.

Large corporate electricity buyers, such as Google and the Clean Energy Buyers Alliance, have been pursuing CFE procurement, using 24/7 and emissionality strategies. Meanwhile, suppliers have been working to provide these buyers with the CFE products they need to apply these strategies. Speakers will share how their collective experience in other states and regions could be applied in New England.

Finally, experts have been focusing on the policies and procurement practices that will need to be modified to enable and support CFE procurement, as well as the underlying data and data access that will be required to execute these strategies. These include next generation procurement strategies that can be implemented by customers, government agencies, and even by utilities procuring electricity supplies for default service. These strategies could also necessitate a reframing of overall mandates and goals, and major revisions to supporting policies.

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MIT Starr Forum: Energy as a Weapon of War: Russia, Ukraine, and Europe in Challenging Times
Friday, December 9
12:00 PM - 1:15 AM
Online
RSVP at https://mit.zoom.us/webinar/register/8716637662420/WN_Yd1_bF0DS3mKt30f_7gxdg

Speakers:
Margarita Balmaceda is the Professor of Diplomacy and International Relations School of Diplomacy and International Relations at Seton Hall University; and an Associate of the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. Her most recent book is "Russian Energy Chains: the Remaking of  Technopolitics from Siberia to Ukraine to the European Union."
Constanze Stelzenmüller is the Director and Fritz Stern Chair of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution. She is an expert on German, European, and trans-Atlantic foreign and security policy and strategy. 

Co-Chairs:
Carol Saivetz is a Senior Advisor in the MIT Security Studies Program. She is the author and contributing co-editor of books and articles on Soviet and now Russian foreign policy issues.
Elizabeth Wood is a Professor of History at MIT. She is the author most recently of Roots of Russia's War in Ukraine as well as articles on Vladimir Putin, the political cult of WWII, right-wing populism in Russia and Turkey, and US-Russian Partnerships in Science. She is Co-Director of the MISTI MIT-Eurasia Program.

Email
svanmell@mit.edu
Website https://calendar.mit.edu/event/starr_forum_energy_as_a_weapon_of_war_russia_ukraine_and_europe_in_challenging_times#

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Earthquakes and the End Times: Global Disasters and Apocalyptic Predictions in the Early Modern English Atlantic
Tuesday, December 13
5:00PM - 6:15PM
This is an online event.
RSVP at https://18308a.blackbaudhosting.com/18308a/Environmental-History-Seminar-Prof-Jennifer-Egloff-Virtual-Event

Author: Jennifer Egloff, NYU Shanghai
Comment: Conevery Bolton Valencius, Boston College
Throughout early modern Europe and the Atlantic World, individuals recorded details of earthquakes in diaries and letters, contemplated meanings in sermons, and learned about distant disasters via broadsides and pamphlets. Highlighting the contemporary providential worldview, this paper argues that numbers contained in earthquake reports were particularly significant. By recording precisely when earthquakes occurred—and making correlations with distant earthquakes—individuals interpreted God’s messages apocalyptically, arguing that particular earthquakes correlated with those described in Revelation. Some people combined this with additional chronological information to predict when Judgment Day would occur. This paper explores the extent to which New Englanders were unique in their providential and apocalyptical interpretations of global disasters, compared to their Atlantic counterparts.

The Environmental History Seminar invites you to join the conversation. Seminars bring together a diverse group of scholars and interested members of the public to workshop a pre-circulated paper. Learn more.

Purchasing the $25 seminar subscription gives you advanced access to the seminar papers of all seven seminar series for the current academic year. Subscribe at www.masshist.org/research/seminars. Subscribers for the current year may login to view currently available essays. 

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A Changing Planet Seminar: Going Circular: Addressing Climate Change through Circular Development
Wednesday, December 14
6am - 7:30am (11:00 - 12:30 GMT)
Grantham Institute Board Room, Sherfield Building, South Kensington Campus, London, UK
and Livestream

Circular development is a regenerative approach to the way in which we design, plan and manage urban ecosystems. It has the potential to help city-regions mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and adapt for climate change. It will ecologically regenerate urban systems; turn cities into producers as well as consumers of resources; and enable them to adapt more easily to the tumultuous changes in the landscape. However, it does incur a whole range of challenges to implementation. Perhaps the greatest of these is the low value the economic system attributes to circular activities, which are needed to address climate change.

Join us in person at Grantham Institute Board room, or watch the online screening at Silwood PArk’s F&H rooms, or online for an intriguing discussion with Prof Jo. There will be time for questions after her presentation and a networking session will follow.

About our speaker
Jo Williams is a senior lecturer in Sustainable Urbanism at the Bartlett School of Planning. She co-developed the innovative MSC Sustainable Urbanism and was the director of the programme from 2010 – 2012. She is currently Director of the International Circular Cities Hub which she founded in collaboration with the Ellen Macarthur Foundation. She works closely with industry (e.g. ARUPs, Zed Architects, Happolds, WSP, CBRE, WS Atkins), government (municipalities, regional and national governments in Europe and Asia), interest groups (e.g. Asia- Pacific Zero Carbon Hub), International bodies (European Environment Agency and United Nations). She has acted as an advisor to a number of regional, national and international bodies including: the United Nations task force on the Marrakech process, the European Environment Agency; the World Congress on Smart Cities, the UK Peak Oil committee, the Horizon Scanning team and UK Department of Business, Innovation and Enterprise; and the GLA London Renewables. She is on the steering panel for several large research projects and conferences focussed on low carbon and smart urbanism. She reviews papers for several journals (including Energy Policy, Journal Cleaner production, Environment and Planning B) that are important in the field of sustainable urbanism and energy policy. She has published widely in peer-reviewed journals and written “Zero Carbon Homes – A Road Map” a book published by EarthScan-Routledge

Joining the event
This will be a hybrid event, with the opportunity for Imperial staff and students to attend at one of two campus locations (South Kensington and Silwood Park).

In Person
South Kensington Campus – The Grantham Institute Boardroom, followed by a networking reception.
Silwood Park Campus – Fisher and Haldane. There will be a live stream of the event here followed by a networking reception.
Online

Guests can join the seminar remotely on zoom. Details to be sent to those who register.

The Changing Planet seminar series is run by students and staff on the Science and Solutions for a Changing Planet (SSCP) Doctoral Training Program. It offers the chance to hear the latest in understanding, adapting to and mitigating environmental problems, complementing the diversity of environmental research at Imperial College London and beyond. Please be aware that our seminars are recorded. If you do not wish to appear on the recording please alert a member of staff. For any further enquiries regarding the Changing Planet seminar series, please contact us at grantham.events@imperial.ac.uk .

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An Introduction to Nuclear Weapons
Fridays, January 6 through January 27, 2023
11:00am to 12:00pm
MIT, Building 32-155, 155 32 Vassar Street, Cambridge
and Online
RSVP at https://calendar.mit.edu/event/introduction_to_nuclear_weapons#.Y4GEyS2ZOiI

Is nuclear war possible? How close have we come? What can be done to prevent it?

These talks are will provide a broad overview of the ways in which nuclear weapons have impacted our world, and the ways in which they may bring it to ruin.

Lecture 1 (1/6): Nuclear weapons design, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, potential biological and societal effects, nuclear winter
Lecture 2 (1/13): The nuclear arms race, nuclear crises, Ukraine and Taiwan, accidental nuclear war
Lecture 3 (1/20): Nuclear proliferation, nuclear coercion, North Korea and Iran
Lecture 4 (1/27): Arms control, risk reduction, prospects for the future

No prerequisites, no homework, not for credit.

Content warning: 1st talk will cover bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki with some graphic detail.

Editorial Comment:  This is an MIT Independent Activities Period [IAP] program.  IAP was started by students back in the 60s©™allrights reserved and allowed anyone from a janitor to a professor emeritus to teach a course.  It’s what got me interested in events listing back in the 1970s.

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**Events**

Keeping the (Decarbonized) Lights On: US Housing, Equity, and the Energy Transition
Friday, December 2
12:15 PM - 1:15 PM EST
Online 
RSVP at https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_hJosld4uQd-zVVdPZSmwWQ

​Because housing produces about one-fifth of the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions, decarbonizing housing is a major focus of the recently passed Inflation Reduction Act and several other initiatives. In this talk, Carlos Martín, project director of the Center’s Remodeling Futures Program, will discuss the multiple–and often overlapping–approaches to decarbonizing housing: energy efficiency, electrification, and renewable energy. He’ll also discuss efforts to help policymakers develop strategies that harness the skills of the tradespeople who will do much of the needed work as well as efforts to address inequities in our current residential energy system.

Contact james chaknis
617-495-7908

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Hurricanes and Breezes: Visualizing Climate Change
Friday, December 2
12 PM ET
Online on Zoom
RSVP at https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rZ-Q2dV9RRmiVb4jAkqvBA

What role can visualization play in understanding and managing climate change? Data analytics experts Fernanda Viégas and Martin Wattenbergwill discuss a series of projects that visualize and portray climate and weather, and explore issues that these projects have raised.

Viégas and Wattenberg are long-time collaborators who led IBM’s Visual Communication Lab and co-founded Flowing Media, Inc., a visualization studio focused on media and consumer-oriented projects. Before joining the Harvard faculty, they also co-founded and led the “Big Picture” team at Google and Google Research’s PAIR (People + AI Research) initiative, which researches and designs AI systems that improve human-AI interactions. The systems Viégas, Wattenberg, and their teams have created are used daily by millions of people. With the goal of democratizing AI technology and visualization, their work engages with important societal questions, expectations, and values, including those related to climate change.
Harvard Radcliffe Institute gratefully acknowledges the Ethel and David Jackson Fund for the Future Climate, which is supporting this event.

Speakers
Fernanda Viégas, Sally Starling Seaver Professor, Harvard Radcliffe Institute, and Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Martin Wattenberg, Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science, Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Moderator
Edo Berger, codirector of the science program, Harvard Radcliffe Institute, and professor of astronomy, Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences

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Peter Zeihan: Mapping the Collapse of Globalization
Friday, December 2 
3:30PM (12:30 PM PST)
Online
Cost;  $10 -$15

Was 2019 the last great year for the world economy? For generations, everything has been getting faster, better and cheaper. Complex, innovative industries were created to satisfy consumers, but are we at the brink of not being able to sustain ongoing demand?

Geopolitical strategist Peter Zeihan asserts it is only a matter of time before major changes will start to unfold that will affect how we manufacture goods, grow food and produce energy. Additionally, the list of countries able to sustain this model is much smaller than you might think.

Zeihan issues an urgent call to avoid what he sees as a catastrophic ending and maps out what the “next” world will look like.

Registered guests will receive a complimentary copy of The End of the World Is Just the Beginning, courtesy of the Ken and Jaclyn Broad Family Fund. Domestic shipping only.

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The Appallingly Bad (Neoclassical) Economics of Climate Change
Sunday, December 4
2:00 PM – 3:15 PM EST
Online

Join Steve Keen to find out how economists made their own inaccurate predictions about the damage climate change causes.

Forecasts by economists of the economic damage from climate change have been notably sanguine, compared to warnings by scientists about damage to the biosphere. This is because economists made their own predictions of damages, using three spurious methods: assuming that about 90% of GDP will be unaffected by climate change, because it happens indoors; using the relationship between temperature and GDP today as a proxy for the impact of global warming over time; and using surveys that diluted extreme warnings from scientists with optimistic expectations from economists.

Nordhaus has misrepresented the scientific literature to justify using a smooth function to describe the damage to GDP from climate change. Correcting for these errors makes it feasible that the economic damages from climate change are at least an order of magnitude worse than forecast by economists, and may be so great as to threaten the survival of human civilization.

Professor Steve Keen is a Distinguished Research Fellow at University College London's Institute for Strategy, Resilience & Security, the author of The New Economics: A Manifesto (2021) Debunking Economics (2011) and Can We Avoid Another Financial Crisis? (2017), and one of the few economists to anticipate the Global Financial Crisis of 2008, for which he received the Revere Award from the Real World Economics Review.

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Rocky Mountain Institute Discussion — How Can We Accelerate Our Clean Energy Future?
Tuesday, December 6 
11:00 a.m. ET
Online

Governments and companies are acknowledging and acting on climate change like never before, offering hope that major economies have set their sights on a clean energy future. With this shift, what’s possible? The conceptual phase of the clean energy transition is over, and we can make this the decade we turn the tide on climate change. RMI must inspire the world to act faster, and our innovative experts are all in. Join our new CEO, Jon Creyts, and three emerging RMI leaders to hear how we can accelerate our clean energy future by acting on one of our core convictions: Hope, Applied.

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Are Industry Regulators Ready for the Climate Transition?
Tuesday, December 6
12:00PM - 1:30PM
Kleinman Energy Forum, Fisher Fine Arts Library, 220 S 34th Street, Philadelphia, PA
and Online

MEREDITH FOWLIE, Class of 1935 Endowed Chair in Energy, UC Berkeley
Moderator
SUSANNA BERKOUWER, Assistant Professor of Business Economics & Public Policy, Wharton School

Many of the industries on the front lines of the climate transition are subject to extensive economic regulation. Are these regulatory regimes up to the task of coordinating an efficient and equitable climate transition? UC Berkeley economist Meredith Fowlie will discuss how economic regulation in key industries (such as electricity, natural gas, and insurance) is being tested by climate-related pressures. She will also talk about opportunities for regulatory innovation and some design challenges ahead.

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The 2022 Climate Risk Scorecard: Assessing U.S Financial Regulator Action
Tuesday, December 6
1:00 PM in Eastern Time (US and Canada)
Online

The 2022 Climate Risk Scorecard, published in June 2022, benchmarked U.S. federal financial regulator progress on climate-related financial risk and communicated progress to various stakeholders, including state and federal regulators, Congress, the public, investors, NGOs, the media, the market, and regulated entities. The Scorecard demonstrates the rapidly changing risk management landscape, highlighting regulatory actions in the United States. This webinar will review and highlight regulator actions addressing climate-related financial risk, explore progress made in the six months since the 2022 Scorecard’s publication, and discuss important next steps.  

In this webinar, attendees will:  
Review the 2022 Scorecard results for nine federal financial regulators. 
Hear from federal financial regulators on why their agencies are addressing climate risk, and the major steps they have taken so far. 
Discover the current progress in the climate risk landscape, and the next steps necessary to effectively manage these risks. 
Demonstrate an understanding of the regulatory and market shift that is already happening, and the importance of continued action (including finalizing OCC/FDIC’s Climate Principles, and SEC’s climate disclosure rule). 

Explore the scorecard at https://www.ceres.org/accelerator/regulation/scorecard

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Farmers-Scientists panel on Climate-Smart Agriculture
Wednesday, December 7
8am EST [2:00 PM – 3:30 PM CET]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/farmers-scientists-panel-on-climate-smart-agriculture-tickets-466191901527

Organized jointly by The Global Plant Council and WIKIFARMER.
Scientists, working on staple crops of huge economical and food safety importance, will present the latest climate-smart agriculture ideas to farmers. Each expert will focus on one particular staple crop: wheat, corn, potato, and rice.
Agenda and Confirmed Panellists:
Welcome by Isabel Mendoza (The Global Plant Council) and Stella Provelengiou (Wikifarmer)
Introduction by Bill Davies, Lancaster Environment Centre
Climate-Smart Agriculture solutions 
Matthew Reynolds (Cimmyt) - Wheat
Christian Bachem (Wageningen University and Solynta) - Potato 
Yu Wang (University of Illinois) - Maize/corn
Q&A

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And on His Farm He Had..A Photovoltaic System? Where Solar and Farming Meet
Wednesday, December 7
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM EST
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/and-on-his-farm-he-hada-photovoltaic-system-where-solar-and-farming-meet-tickets-469142807767

The hour-long event, sponsored by PNC Bank, will feature Michael Roth, a Washington & Jefferson College alumnus who serves as the Director of Conservation and Innovation at the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture.

While some see solar power and farmland as incompatible, others see it as the new normal. These polarized views can often create confusion. Additionally, solar power on farmland raises a number of critical issues like food security, climate change, and farm vitality. Fortunately, with proper planning, a happy medium can be found. 

This webinar will focus on the growing field of agrivoltaics (sometimes referred to as agrisolar, dual-use solar, or low-impact solar) in Pennsylvania. The term ‘agrivoltaics’ refers to the co-location of agriculture and photovoltaic energy generation systems. An understanding of agrivoltaics is necessary as the search for land parcels that can accommodate the United States’ growing solar power sector continues. 

Agriculture occupies about 43% of the lower forty-eight states’ surface area, while another 5% is taken up by roads and urban areas, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. To accommodate the demand for additional solar panels in order to meet the nation’s climate goals, at least some farmland will inevitably needed. Thus, we need to identify ways to allow agriculture and solar power to complement one another. 

Michael Roth is the Director of Conservation and Innovation at the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. In this role, he researches, analyzes, and presents new and emerging issues to farmers and policymakers in the Commonwealth. Previously, Roth served as the Policy Director and Executive Policy Specialist at PA DOA. Roth earned his master’s degree in Public Administration from the University of Pittsburgh and his bachelor’s degree in Environmental Studies from Washington & Jefferson College.

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Cyber Negotiations: The Case of Ransomware
Wednesday, December 7
12:00 pm - 1:00 pm
Zoom
RSVP at https://harvard.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_rMSgqEfxRfC_HSj-ig8UlA

Professor Lawrence Susskind will present information on a new technique in the Defensive Social Engineering toolbox of Cyber Negotiation. This is a new class of non-technical strategies against cyberattacks being developed. Cyber defenders can use Defensive Social Engineering along with technical tools to defeat or compromise attackers.

Watch this video on Social Cyberdefense of Urban Critical Infrastructure: https://youtu.be/fMmfVJv8b-o

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Farming + Fresh Water - "Solving Complex Problems" (12.000) Final Presentation
Wednesday, December 7
7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
MIT, Huntington Hall (10-250) 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge
and Online

Come see this year's Terrascope students present proposals to increase agricultural productivity while protecting access to fresh water in Navajo Nation. Questions welcome from the audience as well as the expert panel.

Free and open to the public. Reception to follow.

Can’t make it? Watch our livestream:  https://terrascope.mit.edu/portfolio_page/class-of-2026-farming-fresh-water/

For more information, contact:
Michelle Contos (617-253-4074) – terrascope-office@mit.edu

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After Biden-Xi Handshake: Is U.S.-China Climate Collab About to Heat Up?
Wednesday, December 7
7:30 PM – 9:00 PM EST
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/after-biden-xi-handshake-is-us-china-climate-collab-about-to-heat-up-tickets-470606876837

The U.S. and China have hurtled toward decoupling in recent years. Relations between the world’s biggest superpowers reached an unprecedentedly low point this year, as most U.S.-China bilateral dialogues — including on climate — were frozen after Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan this August.

Yet, climate change waits for no one. Climate, perhaps more than any other field in the bilateral relationship, demands the highest level of collaboration between the U.S. and China. What are the biggest opportunities and challenges for U.S.-China climate cooperation going forward? Does the handshake seen around the world between Presidents Xi Jinping and Joe Biden — as well as the resumption of informal talks between U.S. Climate Envoy John Kerry and his Chinese counterpart, and Secretary of State Anthony Blinken’s planned visit to China in 2023 — portend that U.S.-China climate partnership will soon warm up again?

Join China Institute-Serica U.S.-China Next-Gen Leaders Circle online on Wednesday, December 7, 2022 at 7:30PM Eastern Time/Thursday, December 8, 2022 at 8:30AM Beijing Time with a panel of top experts across sectors — from investors, policymakers, philanthropists, academics, and nonprofits — to discuss the road ahead for U.S.-China climate collaboration in the age of decoupling. 
Speaker: 

Mr. Siddharth Chatterjee is the UN Resident Coordinator in China, the highest-ranking representative of the UN Development System in China. He has more than 25 years of experience in international cooperation, sustainable development, humanitarian coordination and peace and security. Most recently, he served as the UN Resident Coordinator in Kenya after holding other leadership positions across the Organization, including as Resident Representative of the UNDP and Representative of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in Kenya; Regional Director for the Middle East and Europe for the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) in Denmark; and Chief of Staff in the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI). He also held leadership positions with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) in Indonesia, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan, and in UN Peacekeeping Operations with the UN Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina (UNMIBH). Mr. Chatterjee has also served in the Red Cross Movement (IFRC) as the Chief Diplomat and Head of Resource Mobilization in Switzerland. Mr. Chatterjee holds a master’s degree in public policy from Princeton University in the United States of America and a bachelor’s degree from the National Defence Academy in India.

Panelists:
Andrew Chung has been a tech investor and entrepreneur for over 20 years with deep experience investing in climate tech and healthtech as an early investor in breakthrough companies that created US$30 billion of market value. He founded 1955 Capital that focuses on sustainability (energy, food, agriculture), education, health, and other emerging technologies. Prior to launching 1955 Capital, Chung was a general partner at Khosla Ventures, a venture capital firm with over $6 billion under management and the world’s largest sustainable technology venture portfolio. As a thought leader in sustainable technology and U.S.-China collaboration, Chung served on a White House roundtable on advanced manufacturing during the Obama Administration and has advised global leaders on energy policy. He has given talks on the future of food and energy, moonshot entrepreneurship, ESG investing, and U.S.-China relations at numerous global conferences. Chung holds a BA in Applied Mathematics from Harvard University and an MBA from the Wharton School of Business. He currently serves on the Dean’s Advisory Cabinet at the Harvard John A. Paulson School for Engineering and Applied Sciences, where he sits on the Harvard Life Sciences & Innovation Task Force, and served on the Advisory Board for the Wharton Initiative for Global Environmental Leadership.

Professor Xuhui Lee is Sara Shallenberger Brown Professor of Meteorology, Director of the Yale Center for Earth Observation, and Program Coordinator of the Yale-Tsinghua dual degree program. His research areas include boundary-layer meteorology, micrometeorological instrumentation, remote sensing, and carbon cycle science. One focus of his research activity is on biophysical effects of land use on the climate system. Other ongoing projects investigate greenhouse gas fluxes in the terrestrial environment (forests, cropland and lakes), isotopic tracers in the cycling of carbon dioxide and water vapor, and urban climate mitigation. He is recipient of the 2015 Award for Outstanding Achievement in Biometeorology from the American Meteorological Society. His recent textbook Fundamentals of Boundary-Layer Meteorology offers the accumulation of insights gained during his academic career as a researcher and teacher in the field of boundary-layer meteorology.

Moderator:
Jeremy Goldkorn is co-host of the Sinica podcast and editor-in-chief of SupChina.com. He moved to China in 1995 and became managing editor of Beijing's first independent English-language entertainment magazine. In 2003, he founded the website and research firm, Danwei, which tracked Chinese media, markets, politics and business. It was acquired in 2013 by the Financial Times. Goldkorn is founder of Great Wall Fresh, a social enterprise to help Chinese peasant farmers run small tourism businesses catering to foreign outdoor enthusiasts. He has lived in a workers dormitory, produced a documentary film about African soccer players in Beijing, and rode a bicycle from Peshawar to Kathmandu via Kashgar and Lhasa. He moved to Nashville Tennessee in 2015 and is a board member of the Tennessee China Network.

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Greta Thunberg in conversation with Naomi Klein
Thursday, December 8
2pm EST [19:00 GMT]
Online
Cost:  £11.06 - £30.92 [with book]

Greta Thunberg will be joined by Naomi Klein and others to discuss the climate emergency – and how we can stop it.

Have we run out of time to change the world, or is there still hope? The Climate Book gathers the wisdom and experience of more than 100 experts – from geophysicists and meteorologists, to engineers, economists and indigenous leaders – to show how the ecological and sustainability crises are all connected, and to give us the tools and knowledge we need to find hope through action.

Thunberg became a prominent figure in the fight against greenwashing, denial and climate justice in 2018, when she inspired an international movement of school strikes against government inaction. She frequently addresses parliaments and world summits, and in 2019, a collection of her speeches, No One Is Too Small To Make a Difference, made her Waterstones author of the year.

Guardian environment editor Damian Carrington will host the evening, which will include a conversation between Greta Thunberg and Naomi Klein. They will also be joined by Saleemul Huq, Director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development based in Bangladesh, Pakistani climate justice advocate Ayisha Siddiqa and Kate Raworth, author of Doughnut Economics. 

£1 from every ticket sold will be donated to Fridays For Future.
This event will be hosted on a third-party live streaming platform Zoom, please refer to their privacy policy and terms and conditions before purchasing a ticket to the event. After registering, please refer to your confirmation email for access to the event.
Closed captions will be available for this event.

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Stefan Rahmstorf: 2022 Stephen H. Schneider Award for Outstanding Climate Science Communication
Friday, December 9 
7am EST (10:00am PST)
RSVP at https://www.climateone.org/events/stefan-rahmstorf-2022-stephen-h-schneider-award-outstanding-climate-science-communication

Climate One is delighted to present the 2022 Stephen H. Schneider Award for Outstanding Climate Science Communication to climate scientist and ocean expert Dr. Stefan Rahmstorf. 

In a year of unprecedented oceanic changes, Dr. Rahmstorf exemplifies the rare combination of superb scientist and powerful communicator in his work to convey the impact of climate on oceans, sea level rise, and increasing extreme weather events. 

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Nature-Based Adaptation: Getting to Scale
Friday, December 9 
9:00 am - 12:00 pm
CDM Smith, 75 State Street, Boston
and Online
RSVP at https://climateadaptationforum.org/event/nature-based-adaptation-getting-to-scale/
Cost:  $15 - $45

Flooding risks, sea level rise, storm surges, and extreme heat are accelerating with a changing climate. Ecosystems are also at risk, along with the social, economic, and environmental benefits they provide. Nature-based climate adaptation approaches offer opportunities to bring people into greater harmony with ecology, secure and enhance ecosystem services for future generations, and cost-effectively reduce some flooding risks.  Funders, regulators, adaptation professionals, and the public now view nature-based adaptation as no longer an aspiration, but a priority or requirement. Pilot projects are being scaled up to billions of oysters, miles of shoreline, and hectares of wetlands. But how feasible and effective are they? And how do we effectively regulate and build the capacity to plan and implement them at scales that match the urgency of risks, speed of climate changes, and our own expectations? Join us to learn about the opportunities and barriers to scaling up nature-based approaches to climate adaptation, from planning to permitting to implementation.

Forum Co-Chairs
Nasser Brahim, Senior Climate Resiliency Specialist, Woods Hole Group
Mark Costa, Water Resources and Civil Engineer, VHB
Melanie Gárate, Director of Climate Engagement, Stone Living Lab

Forum Speakers
Alison Bowden, Director of Science & Strategy, The Nature Conservancy
Pippa Brashear, Resilience Principal, SCAPE
Jason Burtner, South Shore Regional Coordinator, Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management (CZM)
Leah Feldman, Coastal Policy Analyst, Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council (RI CRMC)
Heidi Nutters, Senior Program Manager, San Francisco Estuary Partnership
Steve Rochette, Chief of Public Affairs, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) Philadelphia District

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Zaporizhzhia: Facing the Dangers of Nuclear Plants in War and Peace   
Sunday, December 11 
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm EST 
Online
RSVP at https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYvdeGqqjsoEt2Q05E4H-A7_2doPCMPPeH7

As we learned from Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and Fukushima, dangers are inherent to the generation of nuclear power.  These dangers expand exponentially in wartime. With six reactors, Zaporizhzhia is the largest nuclear plant in Ukraine and all of  Europe. It has been occupied by Russian military forces since early March but has continued to be operated by its Ukrainian staff.  Near the frontline of the war, the plant has been damaged by shelling of disputed origins, and all six reactors have been shut down. Faced with the dangers of a possible incident that could transform the plant into a massive dirty bomb and fallout impacting much of Europe and possibly Russia, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has been leading efforts to establish a safety and security zone at, and around, the plant.

In this webinar, Russian and U.S. experts will explain the present situation at the Zaporizhzhia plant, the dangers by the plant and others across Ukraine, and what the international community do to prevent a nuclear catastrophe.

Oleg V. Bodrov is an engineer-physicist, environmentalist, former member of the Council of IPB, chairman of the Public Council of the South Coast of the Gulf of Finland, St. Petersburg, Russia. He was elected a board member of the International Peace Bureau in October 2022.

A leader of the Russian peace, environmental protection and nuclear safety movements, Bodrov works in coalition with partners from the Baltic Sea countries is working to reduce the level of confrontation between NATO and Russia in the Baltic.   He is one of the organizers of the campaign “The Baltic Sea – the sea of peace, peace among people and environmental protection!”

He has authored reports at international anti-war conferences in Helsinki, Paris, New York, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, produced documentaries on the consequences of nuclear weapons production and “peaceful nuclear energy, which are translated into English, German and Japanese, and promotes safe decommissioning of nuclear power plants based on world best practices and democratic participation of authorities, the nuclear industry and the public.

Linda Pentz Gunter founded Beyond Nuclear in 2007 and serves as its international specialist as well as its media and development director. She also writes for and curates Beyond Nuclear International. Prior to her work in anti-nuclear advocacy, she was a journalist for 20 years in print and broadcast, working for USA Network, Reuters, The Times (UK) and other US and international outlets.

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Environmental Destruction: The Effects of War, Pollution & Capital
Wednesday, December 14
7am - 11am [12:00 – 16:00 GMT]
Online
RSVP at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/environmental-destruction-the-effects-of-war-pollution-capital-tickets-426078390937

(In)Justice International are proud to put out a call for attendees and papers/abstracts for our December Workshop which is open to all academics, researchers, students (of any level), Barristers, reporters and people who have lived experienced of the devastating traumas of environmental destruction. 

The workshop invites holistic, intersectional approaches relating to war, oppression, pollution, neoliberalism, discrimination and climate change. For example, one could take the influence of capital and, by association, neoliberalism where the drive for profit can create unnecessary pollution across the world. Global organisations often seek the least expensive means of production often characterised by a low paid (poverty stricken) workforce. Allied to the weaker Health and Safety regulations in many countries, productivity targets are often enforced. 
As a consequence, any shortcuts that result in greater productivity at the expense of the environment or working conditions are either ignored or encouraged which, in turn, can result in the ‘dumping’ of waste products as opposed to recycling or disposal processes that cost more money. Indeed, this ‘dumping’ tends to take place in the poorer neighbourhoods and, therefore, affects those more susceptible to poverty than more elite sections of society (see https://www.injustice-intl.org/environment).

War on the other hand can result in similarly devastating consequences. The use of heavy ammunition, the raising of buildings and power stations the war has exacerbated levels of pollution. In addition, war intensifies relations appertaining to forced migration (and subsequent discriminatory practices) alongside concerns over energy supplies with those countries that have agreed to zero emissions targets beginning to resort back to the burning of fossil fuels. All-in-all, there is an exacerbation of the causes of climate change and an increase in relative poverty if not absolute poverty. 

And with climate change, the poorest are disproportionately affected.

These are but a few of the examples that can lead to both an intersectional and holistic account of the overwhelming havoc being caused by environmental destruction. From whatever the preferred approach of the speaker/researcher on the subject, (In)Justice International welcomes the submission of abstracts.
Agenda
12-12.10 (GMT) Brief Introduction.
12.10-13.10 Four fifteen-minute presentations.
13.10-13.30 Breakout sessions
13.30-13.50 Q&A
13-50-14.00 Break
14.00-15.00 Four fifteen-minute presentations.
15.00-15.20 Breakout session
15.20-15.40 Q&A
15.40-15.50 Closing remarks
Presentations in this event could lead to publication in either our journals (please click on https://www.injustice-intl.org/cfp1-call-for-journal-abstracts) or books (https://anthempress.com/crime-criminality-and-injustice-hb). It could also secure a place at our World Convention in Finland 2023 (see CfPs on https://www.injustice-intl.org/copy-of-call-for-abstracts-papers-2).

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Great Decisions with Rachel Kyte | Climate Change
December 14
6:00 PM - 7:30 PM
Hybrid Event at the Boston Public Library, Rabb Hall, 700 Boylston Street, Boston
and Online
RSVP at https://www.worldboston.org/calendar/2022/12/14/climate-change

The ideological divide in the United States on the subject of climate change has impeded progress in curbing greenhouse emissions. But extreme weather events at both ends of the thermometer have focused attention on the consequences of inaction. What role will the United States play in future negotiations on climate?

Join WorldBoston for a discussion of this complex topic with Rachel Kyte, Dean of The Fletcher School at Tufts University. The program will feature expert remarks from Dean Kyte, live audience Q&A, and time for networking and discussion with other globally-oriented participants over light refreshments.

This event is free and open to the public, but registration is required. This program will take place at the Boston Public Library from 6:00 to 7:30 PM ET and will also be live-streamed to Zoom from 6:00 to 7:00 PM ET.

Email
nmase@worldboston.org
Website
https://www.worldboston.org/calendar/2022/12/14/climate-change