1 / 39

CMI Ninth Annual Meeting February 9-10, 2010 Co-Directors: Steve Pacala and Robert Socolow (on leave 2009-2010) Acting

CMI Ninth Annual Meeting February 9-10, 2010 Co-Directors: Steve Pacala and Robert Socolow (on leave 2009-2010) Acting Co-Director: Craig Arnold Princeton University cmi.princeton.edu.

blodwyn
Download Presentation

CMI Ninth Annual Meeting February 9-10, 2010 Co-Directors: Steve Pacala and Robert Socolow (on leave 2009-2010) Acting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CMI Ninth Annual Meeting February 9-10, 2010 Co-Directors: Steve Pacala and Robert Socolow (on leave 2009-2010) Acting Co-Director: Craig Arnold Princeton University cmi.princeton.edu

  2. Goal: The goal of the meeting is to understand the history of the CMI, to review findings from our work in 2009, to exchange information about future domestic and international policy in the context of Copenhagen, and to exchange information that will help frame our partnership in 2010-2015.

  3. CMI Ninth Annual Meeting Conference Schedule: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2010 Part One

  4. CMI Ninth Annual Meeting Conference Schedule: Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2010, Palmer House Part Two

  5. Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010, Palmer) CMI Ninth Annual Meeting Conference Schedule: Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010, Palmer House

  6. LAUNCH OF THE AGREEMENT • December 1999 – June 2000. BP runs an internal, U.S.-based competition for a research initiative in carbon mitigation. • October 2000. BP and Ford Motor Company jointly announce the formation of the Carbon Mitigation Initiative (CMI) at Princeton University to develop new approaches to carbon management. • “CMI will focus on resolving the fundamental scientific, environmental, and technological issues that ultimately will determine public acceptance of carbon management strategies. It will search for strategies that: 1) will have the desired effect on atmospheric carbon and climate; 2) will be safe and reliable with limited environmental impact; and 3) will involve neither prohibitive economic costs nor prohibitive disruption of patterns of energy consumption.” • Recognizing the complexity and durability of the issues, both BP and Ford Motor Company make a ten-year commitment, with BP funding of $15,100,000 and Ford Fund funding of $5,000,000. • December 2000. Kickoff meeting is held in Princeton.

  7. Mission Statement: The mission of CMI is to lead the way to a compelling and sustainable solution of the carbon and climate change problem. By combining the unique and complementary strengths of the CMI parties – one premier academic institution and two influential global companies – CMI participants seek to attain a novel synergy across fundamental science, technology development, and business principles that accelerates the pace from discovery, through proof of concept, to scalable solution.

  8. 2000-2015 Carbon Integration Carbon Science Bender / Morel / Pacala Sarmiento / Sigman Oppenheimer / Pacala / Socolow Carbon Capture Carbon Storage Arnold / Kreutz / Larson / Law / Williams Celia / Debenedetti / Peters / Prevost / Scherer

  9. Science GFDL NOAA Joint Institute Capture Andlinger Center founded in 2009 with a $100 million gift Major new $20 million Center on Combustion in May 2009 Storage Major new federal funding Integration Siebel Energy Grand Challenge ($1.5 million per year) New Princeton initiative to build climate science and policy Leverage

  10. BP: G. Hill Ford: J. Ginder “pause” Research Groups: Science Capture Storage Integration Co-Directors: S. Pacala R. Socolow Advisory Council: D. Burtraw D. Hawkins D. Keith M. Levi S. Benson/F. Orr S.Long / C.Somerville Milan Politecnico Tsinghua Univ. Alberta Geol. Survey Climate Central ETIP, Harvard

  11. Research Programs: Science Group: From left to right: Bender / Morel / Pacala / Sarmiento / Sigman

  12. Science Group 2009 Summary The SCIENCE GROUP continued to narrow the uncertainty in the causes and magnitude of the terrestrial and ocean carbon sinks. New research by the Pacala Group points to the impact of nitrogen cycling on terrestrial carbon sinks, and its new biosphere model is the first to reproduce the history, magnitude and latitudinal distribution of carbon uptake. The Sarmiento Group is working to improve calculations of the ocean carbon sink and explain a puzzling increase in terrestrial uptake in the early 90s. New field and lab results from the Bender and Morel Groups are providing insights into controls on the distribution of ocean productivity and the impacts of ocean acidification. In paleoclimate studies, new samples collected by the Bender Group may be able to extend the Antarctic ice core record much further back in time, and the Sigman Group’s latest results are narrowing down the possible mechanisms of ice age CO2 drawdown.

  13. Research Programs: Integration Group: From left to right: Oppenheimer / Pacala / Socolow

  14. Integration Group 2009 Summary (1 of 4) Sharing Global CO2 Emissions Reductions Among One Billion High Emitters: The Pacala-Socolow Group has proposed a new approach to the allocation of a global CO2 emissions target among the nations of the world, based on a reinterpretation of concept of “common but differentiated responsibilities” (language in the current international agreements), so that the phrase refers to individuals rather than nations. In this formulation, obligations are the same for individuals with similar life-styles, independent of the per-capita emissions of the country in which they live. Follow-on work is aimed at modeling CO2 emissions generated by activities strongly correlated with wealth, including travel by air and meat-eating. Other work documents a remarkable increase in the level of installation and operation of SO2 scrubbers at China's coal plants, which conventional economic models would not expect to occur until China had reached a substantially higher per capita income. Chakravarty, Shoibal, A. Chikkatur, H. de Coninck, Stephen W. Pacala, Robert H. Socolow, and M. Tavoni, 2009: Sharing global CO2 emission reductions among one billion high emitters. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(29), doi:10.1073/pnas.0905232106 11884-11888

  15. Integration Group 2009 Summary (2 of 4) The CMI Biofuels Workshop hosted at Princeton University on June 19-20, 2008 assembled 11 experts from various backgrounds for discussions about the sustainability of biofuels, food and the environment. The workshop led to the following Science paper: Beneficial Biofuels – The Food, Energy, and Environment Trilemma Abstract: Recent analyses of the energy and greenhouse-gas performance of alternative biofuels have ignited a controversy that may be best resolved by applying two simple principles. In a world seeking solutions to its energy, environmental, and food challenges, society cannot afford to miss out on the global greenhouse-gas emission reductions and the local environmental and societal benefits when biofuels are done right. However, society also cannot accept the undesirable impacts of biofuels done wrong. Tilman, D., Robert H. Socolow, J. A. Foley, J. Hill, Eric Larson, L. R. Lynd, Stephen W. Pacala, J. Reilly, Timothy Searchinger, C. Sommerville, and Robert H. Williams, July 2009: Beneficial Biofuels - The Food, Energy, and Environment Trilemma. Science, Washington, D.C., American Association for the Advancement of Science, 325(5938), doi:10.1126/science.1177970 270-271

  16. Integration Group 2009 Summary (3 of 4) CMI has partnered with the National Energy Education Development Project to bring the “stabilization wedges” concept to teachers. The Oppenheimer Group has initiated a project on the history of environmental assessments, beginning with an assessment of the problem of stratospheric ozone depletion. Through analysis of published and archival documents and interviews with key scientists, policy makers, and members of industry, the history of scientific assessment of ozone depletion is being reconstructed. An intriguing dimension of this work is "negative learning" – the phenomenon where scientists stick for long periods of time to the wrong path, rather than converging on the truth inexorably via successive approximations. The expectation is that insights gained from this project will improve our understanding of the scientific learning process and will be transferable to scientific assessment of global climate change.

  17. Integration Group 2009 Summary (4 of 4) CMI is helping steer the national dialogue on carbon mitigation  Co-Directors Pacala and Socolow have both undertaken substantial projects in the service of U.S. carbon policy.  Pacala is leading a committee of the National Academies on carbon monitoring.  Socolow has been a member of two National Academies’ panels on America’s Energy Future and America’s Climate Choices, and is co-directing (with BPs Michael Desmond) an American Physical Society study on the potential for CO2 capture from air.

  18. Research Programs: Capture Group: From left to right: Arnold / Kreutz / Larson / Law / Williams

  19. Capture Group 2009 Summary The CAPTURE GROUP has made major strides in developing low-carbon solutions for both liquid fuels and repowering electricity in the U.S., and has a new emphasis on biofuels and electric storage technologies. Strategies developed this year by the Williams Group use coal and biomass combined with carbon capture and storage to provide liquid fuels with lower biomass requirements than conventional ethanol, and would motivate CCS at coal electric plants at lower emissions prices than retrofits. Recent shale gas discoveries are also motivating new modeling of CCS facilities powered by natural gas rather than coal. The Arnold Group is exploring how to optimize existing energy storage technology to meet the needs of alternative energy sources and extend battery lifetimes. A new combustion research center led by Chung Law, leader of the Law Group, will bring Princeton researchers together with experts from across the nation to study and develop new alternative fuels for use in advanced engines.

  20. Research Programs: Storage Group: From left to right: Celia / Debenedetti / Peters / Prevost / Scherer

  21. Storage Group 2009 Summary The STORAGE GROUP is continuing to develop novel experimental techniques and expand capabilities of models, plus delve into new research areas with external funding. New time-lapse images of corroding cements are supplying the Scherer-Prevost Group with more detailed information on corrosion kinetics for an improved Dynaflow model. The Celia Group has added processes important on the long time scales relevant to storage security to their large scale models, and has begun a new collaboration with the Capture Group to explore using produced brine for both plant cooling and control of CO2 injection. The Debenedetti Group has initiated a new program thrust on the formation and stability of CO2 hydrates. And finally, members of the Storage Group are part of an exciting new multipurpose underground national laboratory (DUSEL), where they will study CO2 sequestration on realistic length scales in a project led by Civil and Environmental Engineering Professor Catherine Peters. .

  22. CMI Launches Redesigned Website Sept 25, 2009 The site (http://cmi.princeton.edu/) now provides added functionality and content. It includes a searchable index of over 700 articles and annual reports published by CMI faculty and staff since the initiative's inception in 2000. Also updated and expanded are the comprehensive lists of CMI members and their research interests, sponsors and research partners, and information on CMI's research, education, outreach and affiliated programs. Special new sections include current news covering research conducted by the CMI community, annual meeting information, materials related to the Stabilization Wedges and One Billion High Emitters papers, a list of resources related to carbon mitigation and more.

  23. Compilation of CMI Publications in Science: 2000 – Present (1/3)

  24. Compilation of CMI Publications in Science: 2000 – Present (2/3)

  25. Compilation of CMI Publications in Science: 2000 – Present (3/3)

  26. Compilation of CMI Publications in Nature: 2000 – Present (1/2)

  27. Compilation of CMI Publications in Nature: 2000 – Present (2/2)

  28. Compilation of CMI Publications in PNAS: 2000 – Present (1/2)

  29. Compilation of CMI Publications in PNAS: 2000 – Present (2/2)

  30. Princeton proposal in 2009 for 2011-2015 BP announces in 2009 its intention to extend the partnership with funding at least at previous levels but with budget otherwise to be determined Princeton completes inventory of new capabilities in in energy and climate in January 2010 BP undertakes corresponding inventory in winter 2010 Process for planning 2011-2015

  31. East Anglia group Hacked email leads to allegations of data manipulation, suppression of alternative views Group prominent in IPCC Penn State exonerates Mann in partial review IPCC Press reports of exaggeration of risks in scientific literature including Himalayan glaciers and risk of tropical forest loss Climategate

  32. Definitive For Uncertain Definitive Against None of the allegations about the IPCC or the East Anglia group changes the strength of the scientific evidence. * * * Climate change in the past Theory and models Current records

  33. 2009 progress in Science, Capture, Storage and Integration Deep dive on domestic policy Deep dive on international policy Meeting Overview

More Related