On Thursday, October 18, 2007, the Climate Change Science
Program (CCSP) will hold a House briefing
on the release of the third in a series of 21 reports to advance climate
science research. Coordinated by the U.S Department of Energy (DOE),
this Synthesis and Assessment Product report, numbered 4.5 and titled
“Effects of Climate Change on Energy Production and Use in the United
States,” summarizes what is known about potential effects of climate
change on energy production and use in the United States.
- Dr. William J. Brennan, Acting Director of the Climate Change Science
Program
- Dr. Jeffrey S. Amthor, DOE Office of
Science, Coordinator of CCSP Report 4.5
- Dr. Thomas J. Wilbanks, CCSP 4.5 Report Lead
Author, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
U.S. Climate Change Science Program
2318 Rayburn
10/18/2007 at 03:00PM
Student leaders in architecture and engineering from three universities
at the US Solar
Decathlon
on the Mall discuss special features of their leading-edge,
solar-powered houses and how their experience has helped shape their
future as innovators. Participants are from the University of Colorado,
Boulder – a two-time solar Decathlon winner, Carnegie Mellon University
(Pittsburgh, PA) and the University of Maryland, College Park. Panel
moderator is Bobbie Faul-Zeitler, editor of Green News Update and mentor
to the University of Maryland team. Co-sponsored by the Smithsonian
office of Energy Management.
At the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History at 10th Street &
Constitution Ave. NW.
DOE Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
District of Columbia
10/18/2007 at 02:00PM
On Thursday, October 18, 2007, the Climate Change Science
Program (CCSP) will hold a Senate briefing
on the release of the third in a series of 21 reports to advance climate
science research. Coordinated by the U.S Department of Energy (DOE),
this Synthesis and Assessment Product report, numbered 4.5 and titled
“Effects of Climate Change on Energy Production and Use in the United
States,” summarizes what is known about potential effects of climate
change on energy production and use in the United States.
- Dr. William J. Brennan, Acting Director of the Climate Change Science
Program
- Dr. Jeffrey S. Amthor, DOE Office of
Science, Coordinator of CCSP Report 4.5
- Dr. Thomas J. Wilbanks, CCSP 4.5 Report Lead
Author, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
U.S. Climate Change Science Program
562 Dirksen
10/18/2007 at 01:00PM
Martin Luther King III to Discuss Impact of
Climate, Oil Dependence on “Vulnerable Communities”
Poor Areas Hit Hardest by Impacts Foreshadow World’s Possible Future
This Thursday Martin Luther King III and
others will appear before Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and the
Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming to discuss
how the impacts of global warming and oil dependence hit hardest on
America and the world’s most vulnerable communities.
Many of the world’s poorest communities are also the ones most in danger
from these twin challenges. Whether it is geographic location in
low-lying areas, or rough economic conditions made even worse by
unstable or high energy prices, or the severe health effects of a
warming earth, global warming and oil dependence hit these communities
hard. Witnesses will discuss these challenges, as well as the solutions
available to these problems.
Witnesses
- Mr. Martin Luther King III, C.E.O,
Realizing the Dream, Inc.
- Mr. Mike Williams, Board Member, National Tribal Environmental
Council
- Mr. Amjad Abdulla, Assistant Director General, Ministry of
Environment, Energy and Water, Government of the Republic of Maldives
- Dr. Eileen Gauna,
Professor, University of New Mexico
House Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee
1100 Longworth
10/18/2007 at 11:00AM
House Agriculture Committee
1300 Longworth
10/18/2007 at 10:00AM
On October 18, the Committee will hold a hearing to examine the role of
black carbon as a factor in climate change and receive testimony from
experts regarding its global and regional impacts, its sources, and the
risks it raises for public health.
Witnesses
- Dr. Mark Z. Jacobson, Prof. of Civil and Environmental Engineering,
Atmosphere/Energy Program, Stanford University
- Dr. Tami C. Bond, Asst. Prof. of Civil and Environmental Engineering,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Dr. V. Ramanathan, Prof. of Climate and Atmospheric Sciences, Scripps
Institute of Oceanography, University of San Diego
- Dr. Charles Zender, Assoc. Prof. of Earth System Science, University
of California at Irvine.
- Dr. Joel Schwartz, Professor of Environmental Epidemiology, Harvard
University
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
2154 Rayburn
10/18/2007 at 10:00AM
The Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI) invites you to a
Congressional briefing featuring the Solar
Decathlon
and the value of incorporating high-performance “green” design in
buildings. The briefing will also discuss how provisions in the pending
energy bill can help improve efficient homes. Buildings account for more
than 40 percent of annual U.S. energy use and are, in turn, responsible
for more than one-third of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions. Because
buildings last many decades, the economic, environmental and health
impacts of inefficient building design are long-lasting.
The Solar Decathlon-taking place on the National Mall October 12 – 20-
is an exciting competition in which 20 teams of college and university
students from across the country, including four international teams,
compete to design, build, and operate the most attractive, effective,
and energy-efficient solar-powered house. The house must also be able to
power an electric vehicle as well as be “off the grid.” These solar
homes are powerful, comfortable, and stylish. They are relaxed and
elegant, wasting neither space nor energy. High efficiency solar houses
like these are using readily available technology and designs-not
futuristic concepts. But policies like stronger building codes and the
solar provisions in the energy bill are essential in helping make our
homes greener and much more efficient-saving both energy and money.
- Rhone Resch, Executive Director, Solar Energy Industries Association
- Dr. Kaye Brubaker, Associate Professor, University of Maryland
- Bill Nesmith, Assistant Director for Conservation, Oregon Department
of Energy
- Lowell Ungar, Director of Policy, Alliance to Save Energy
In addition to discussing the Solar Decathlon, the briefing will address
the role of codes and standards in building energy efficiency. Measures
to promote increased residential building energy efficiency are included
in the House energy bill HR 3221, Title IX,
Sec. 9031. “Encouraging Stronger Building Codes.” The briefing panel
will also discuss the solar provisions in the energy bill, including tax
incentives for solar energy.
This briefing is open to the public and no reservations are required.
For more information, please contact Fred Beck at [email protected] or
202.662.1892.
Environmental and Energy Study Institute
2322 Rayburn
10/17/2007 at 01:00PM
On Wednesday, October 17, 2007, the Investigations and Oversight
Subcommittee will hold a hearing on the impacts of global warming on the
Arctic. This hearing will provide the Committee with an opportunity to
hear from witnesses on three interrelated matters: (1) the current
situation in the Arctic, including the situation facing the polar bear,
(2) ways in which warming in the Arctic may accelerate global warming,
especially through the emission of more greenhouse gases, and (3)
interim steps that could be taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions
while the Congress weighs more elaborate carbon trade or tax proposals.
One of the themes that should emerge from this hearing is that, from a
layman’s perspective, the models used to project climate change and its
ramifications appear to be conservative in their projections. This is
because any phenomena that are not understood well enough to be
represented in models with confidence are excluded. These other
phenomena may accentuate or depress warming trends. In the case of the
Arctic, most of the phenomena that have been excluded from the models
are believed to accentuate warming and its effects. Few will depress it.
The modeling on polar bear survival, for example, uses projections from
the IPCC models to estimate future changes in
sea ice extent. Since the bears’ condition is very dependent upon both
the extent of the sea ice and the duration of ice-free periods,
projections of the bear survival are very dependent upon projections of
sea ice. This summer the sea ice extent is far less than projected by
the models.
The Center for Biological Diversity will appear to provide some advice
on steps that can be taken to reduce warming, with particular emphasis
on their efficacy in the Arctic. Among the steps they advocate are
programs to reduce methane emissions and “black carbon.” Black carbon is
soot that, in the Arctic, has a particularly pernicious effect. When it
is deposited on snow and ice it decreases its reflectivity and increases
its heat absorption leading to greater melting. As the Arctic comes
under more and more industrialization with other warming, one could
anticipate further production of black carbon. Methane is a powerful
greenhouse gas, with an estimated global warming potential 23 times
greater than carbon dioxide over a 100-year time frame. Methane is a
precursor to tropospheric ozone. In that form, it traps shortwave
radiation as it enters the earth’s atmosphere from the sun and then when
it is reflected back again by snow and ice. As a consequence, its impact
is strongest over the poles. Reducing global methane emissions would
provide a particular benefit to the Arctic.
- Dr. Richard
Alley,
Evan Pugh Professor of Geosciences, Pennsylvania State University,
Department of Geosciences
- Dr. Glenn
Juday,
Professor, University of Alaska at Fairbanks, School of Natural
Resources and Agricultural Sciences
- Dr. Sue
Haseltine,
Associate Director for Biology, U.S. Geological Survey, U.S.
Department of Interior
- Kassie R.
Siegel,
Director, Center for Biological Diversity, Climate, Air and Energy
Program
House Science, Space, and Technology Committee
Oversight Subcommittee
2318 Rayburn
10/17/2007 at 10:00AM
This hearing has been postponed.
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee
2154 Rayburn
10/17/2007 at 10:00AM