[E&E seminars] MITEI Seminar Series - Susan Tierney - February 2nd
Jameson Twomey
jtwomey at mit.edu
Tue Jan 26 16:21:35 EST 2010
Why is Modernizing Our Energy Technologies So Darn Hard, But Worth the
Effort?
Susan Tierney, Analysis Group
Tuesday, February 2
4:15 Reception to follow
66-110 (Landau Building, 25 Ames Street)
Abstract
So much work is underway to advance energy technologies to make them
more efficient, have a lower carbon footprint, more accessible to
communities, and so forth. And yet, it is so hard to put new energy
technologies into place in domestic (and many international) markets.
Why is that? Tierney discusses the array of factors arising out of
national energy policy, regulatory approaches and practices, energy
and other politics, investment settings, and so forth, that create
tenacious barriers to the introduction of advanced energy technologies
into existing systems. She also will address what is happening to
overcome those obstacles and why more is needed.
About the speaker
Sue Tierney, a Managing Principal at Analysis Group in Boston, is an
expert on energy economics, regulation and policy. She consults on
market analysis, transmission policy, energy facility siting, utility
ratemaking, energy efficiency, renewables, and climate and energy
policy. Her previous positions included Assistant Secretary for
Policy at the U.S. Department of Energy, Massachusetts Secretary of
Environmental Affairs, Commissioner at the Massachusetts Department of
Public Utilities Chairman of the Board of the Massachusetts Water
Resources Authority, and executive director of the Massachusetts
Energy Facilities Siting Council. She co-chaired the DOE Agency Review
Team for the Obama Presidential Transition Team. Currently, she co-
chairs the National Commission on Energy Policy, chairs the board of
the Energy Foundation, chairs the Advisory Council of the National
Renewable Energy Lab; and is a director of World Resources Institute,
Clean Air Task Force, Clean Air – Cool Planet, Evergreen Solar, and Ze-
gen. She has taught at the University of California at Irvine, and
earned her Ph.D. from Cornell University.
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