Past Events

May 03, 2006
The numbers are overwhelming,” Henry Jacoby tells us in his overview of the final forum panel. The U.S. consumes one-quarter of the world's energy and emits one-quarter of the world's carbon dioxide. The combined population of India and China is nine times that of the U.S., so what will happen as they approach our level of energy consumption? Responses to this challenge, which must be on an enormous scale, should be weighed with great care.
May 03, 2006
SPEAKERS: Henry D. Jacoby: Professor of Management, MIT Sloan. Ronald G. Prinn: TEPCO Professor of Atmospheric Science, Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences MIT's Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. John B. Heywood: Sun Jae Professor of Mechanical Engineering. Karen R. Polenske: Professor of Regional Political Economy and Planning, Department of Urban Studies and Planning. Amy Smith: Senior Lecturer, Department of Mechanical Engineering; 2004 MacArthur Fellow. Leon R.
January 25, 2006 - January 27, 2006
SESSIONS: Ongoing Stabilization Scenario Exercises; Stabilization Calculations: The Role of Threshold Processes, Issues in Definition and Expression of Results; Meta Benefit-Cost Analysis of Stabilization: Defining "Danger"; The Role of Stabilization Levels in Climate Policy; Status and Prospects for Post-2012 Negotiations
October 31, 2005
As the costs of Hurricane Katrina continue to spiral higher -- to date, $125 billion in damages and 1,200 deaths - there's keen interest in perfecting the science of hurricane forecasting. The insurance industry in particular has a big stake in learning where and how the next big one is likely to hit. The problem is that traditional methods of statistical analysis, relying on previous landfalling storms, only go so far in generating useful risk assessments. “We have a bad time predicting in real time when and where hurricanes will develop,” says Emanuel.
March 22, 2005 - March 24, 2005
SESSIONS: Science: Improving Forecasts of Climate Change; Assessing the Impacts of Climate Change;Technology: Electric Generation; Transportation; Public and Private Inducement of Innovation and Technical Change; International Cooperation in Science, R&D, and Technology Transfer
June 09, 2004 - June 11, 2004
SESSIONS: International Trade; Agriculture and Land Use; Air Pollution Control; Energy Security; Economic Development and International Aid; Urban Development and Coastal Protection; Prospects for an International Climate Regime

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