Michele Kearney's Nuclear Wire

Major Energy and Environmental News and Commentary affecting the Nuclear Industry.

Monday, July 15, 2013

MIT Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change



RECENT EVENT: Co-Director John Reilly Speaks at Siemen's Energy Panel

Thursday, July 11, 2013
Siemens World Energy Conference, Road to Daegu   (Browse all news)
Ahead of the World Energy Conference (WEC) in Daegu, South Korea, Siemens is hosting a series of panels throughout the world as part of a "Road to Daegu" series. The results of this exciting journey through the energy systems of the world will be presented at the WEC on October 13-17.

Joint Program Co-Director John Reilly participated in the U.S. panel on July 9th in Florida. The panel was on "Affordable and sustainable energy for the USA: Competitive advantage for the future?"

He was joined by Tom Kuhn, President of the Edison Electric Institute; Jim Robo, President and CEO, NextEra Energy; Michael Suess, CEO, Siemens Energy; Randy Zwirn, CEO, Siemens Energy Service Division, and CEO, Siemens Energy Americas.

About the Panel

Affordability, security and sustainability are the three goals most countries are pursuing when it comes to their energy supply.  In the U.S., there is a strong focus on affordability, and energy prices have always been low compared to international levels.  And this is even more so today than ever before:  The country’s “shale revolution” is slashing natural gas prices to all-time lows.

But can the U.S. achieve both goals – affordability and sustainability? This was the opening question at our third Round Table discussion with Michael Süß, this time held at the headquarters of Florida Power & Light in Juno Beach, Florida... 

For John Reilly, Senior Lecturer at the renowned Sloan School of Management of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the efforts being undertaken in the U.S. on behalf of the environment aren’t enough. “We are a wealthy society in the U.S. and don’t have a real affordability problem in regard to energy prices – but what we can’t afford is not to be sustainable.”...


Read more...

Watch the video of the panelhttp://globalchange.mit.edu/news-events/news/news_id/286#.UePp4hmEPgp

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