On December 3, join energy experts from Carnegie Mellon University's College of Engineering, Carnegie Mellon Architecture, and Carnegie Mellon University - Heinz College of Information Systems and Public Policy for Faculty Dialogue: The U.S. Power Grid: Resiliency and Sustainability. The discussion will feature Scott Institute Director Costa Samaras, Senior Energy Fellow Prof. Karen Clay, and faculty affiliates Ramteen Sioshansi and Azadeh O. Sawyer, LEED AP. This is a virtual event. Registration is open through December 2: https://lnkd.in/eerEwA4w
CMU Scott Institute for Energy Innovation
智库
Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania 2,075 位关注者
We address important energy challenges via collaborative research, innovation, partnerships, education & outreach.
关于我们
The Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation at Carnegie Mellon University addresses the world’s most pressing energy challenges by enabling collaborative research, strategic partnerships, policy outreach, entrepreneurship, and education. We support impactful work that strives to optimize resources and reduce environmental consequences associated with energy production and use. We understand that energy and social equity issues are deeply interconnected, and society can benefit with improved energy access. We seek to encourage the development of breakthrough technologies that will accelerate the transition to a sustainable, low-carbon energy future.
- 网站
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https://www.cmu.edu/energy
CMU Scott Institute for Energy Innovation的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 智库
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania
- 类型
- 教育机构
- 创立
- 2012
- 领域
- energy、research、policy outreach、education、cleantech、innovative energy technologies、parternships、public outreach、events、entrepreneurship和equity
地点
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主要
5000 Forbes Avenue
Scott Hall, 5127
US,Pennsylvania,Pittsburgh,15213
CMU Scott Institute for Energy Innovation员工
动态
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?? The Scott Institute is thrilled to announce AI & Energy as the theme of Energy Week 2025! From March 24-28, 2025, representatives from academia, industry, and government will gather to discuss the challenges of making AI more sophisticated while honoring sustainability objectives. Registration for Energy Week 2025 will open in January. https://lnkd.in/eqjk6kj4
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Last week, the CMU Scott Institute for Energy Innovation and the Center for Iron and Steelmaking Research co-hosted the 2nd Accelerating Green Steel Workshop, an annual gathering of leading experts on iron and steelmaking decarbonization from across the globe. Iron and steelmaking accounts for roughly 8% of global final energy demand and 7% of energy-related CO2 emissions (including process emissions) according to the International Energy Agency. Demand for steel is projected to grow to meet the needs of developing countries and build clean energy infrastructure to achieve mid-century climate goals. To tackle the challenge of decarbonizing processes while meeting demand worldwide in the coming decades, the Workshop brought together representatives from over 17 organizations representing over a quarter of global iron and steel production and cutting-edge technology innovators to discuss research, development, and demonstration priorities and greenhouse gas emissions accounting principles to support deep decarbonization. Carnegie Mellon’s strengths in the areas of iron and steelmaking research and decarbonization provided a strong foundation for a highly productive and impactful discussion, which was co-chaired by Scott Institute Associate Director and professor Valerie Karplus (EPP) and professor Chris Pistorius (MSE). Public proceedings from the Workshop will be released in the coming weeks. We look forward to seeing everyone again next year!
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In one week, the 6th Annual CMU Technology, Sustainability and Business Virtual Forum will feature a panel of five leaders from industry, finance, academia, and the not-for-profit sectors. Held in partnership with Carnegie Mellon University - Tepper School of Business. Registration for the online event is open: https://lnkd.in/efZYaAFx
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New research from faculty fellow Akshaya Jha looks at how air pollution affects pets.
Improving air quality may not only benefit humans, but also our beloved furry friends. ?? According to research from Carnegie Mellon University - Heinz College of Information Systems and Public Policy and the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change & the Environment, high levels of air pollution have led to significant increases in the number of vet visits for both cats and dogs. Using data from more than 7 million visits to veterinary practices over 5 years in the United Kingdom, the study found that reducing pollution levels to meet World Health Organization recommendations would result in 80,000 fewer vet visits each year.
Improving Air Quality Would Avoid 80,000 Vet Visits Every Year, Study Finds
cmu.edu
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“The greatest breakthroughs happen at the intersection of what you know and what the world needs.” CEO Sam Kernion (ENG '12) visited the Scott Institute to deliver a recent installment of the Entrepreneurial Student Lunch Seminar. Kernion discussed meeting his future business collaborator through Carnegie Mellon and creating the strain annealing technology that would inspire the launch of CorePower Magnetics. https://lnkd.in/e8AkC8WZ
A homegrown startup driving next-gen magnetic technology - Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation - Carnegie Mellon University
cmu.edu
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Faculty affiliate Jeff Schneider will work collaboratively with the Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) to harness the power of nuclear fusion using AI. https://lnkd.in/e66Evvwh
AI Meets Fusion: CMU, Princeton Join Forces to Pursue Clean, Abundant Power - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
ri.cmu.edu
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With support from a Scott Institute seed grant, researchers Ramteen Sioshansi, Granger Morgan, and Maryam Hamidi are exploring how to increase power grid resilience by developing an optimization model. https://lnkd.in/d4ACDauJ
Seed grant spotlight: Improving electric-power resilience - Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation - Carnegie Mellon University
cmu.edu
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In one week, Ecotone Renewables founder and CEO Dylan Lew, EIT (ENG '21) will participate in our next Entrepreneurial Student Lunch Seminar. Registration is open: https://lnkd.in/ez7FR-AC
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Scott Institute Associate Director Valerie Karplus and former Director Granger Morgan's new research analyzes hydrogen hubs from economic and environmental perspectives.
Hydrogen is sometimes considered a secret ingredient in the recipe for a net-zero future. As a team of Carnegie Mellon researchers points out, hydrogen offers many advantages, but it’s not a panacea. Engineering and Public Policy (EPP) Department at Carnegie Mellon University's Valerie Karplus and Granger Morgan’s new research moves beyond the hype and analyzes the realities – and risks – of using hydrogen as part of our energy and manufacturing systems. https://lnkd.in/enVrAnJA
Hubs: A step towards a hydrogen future?
engineering.cmu.edu