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Johns Hopkins UniversityEst. 1876

America’s First Research University

Civil and Systems Engineering Seminar Series: Systems Science for the Energy Transition

Feb 12, 2026
12 - 1pm EST
This event is free

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Contact

Kimia Ghobadi

Description

Daniel Kammen, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor of Energy and Climate Justice who has joint appointments in Johns Hopkins Department of Civil and Systems Engineering and School of Advanced Studies, will present "Systems Science for the Energy Transition" for the Department of Civil and Systems Engineering.

Abstract:

The climate science, technology, and policy landscape we face today are hugely out of alignment. While the climate science community has highlighted the critical need for immediate action towards a 1.5 degree C (or, at one time we hoped, lower) global climate warming target, and while energy and transportation technologies are moving rapidly to enable that tremendously challenging goal, the US stands as a national denier of a path that requires immediate action on both the climate and justice transitions. Both large infrastructure choices and immediate daily decisions are needed. Sadly, every delay in moving the US to a productive, proactive position, makes achieving these goals less likely, or more costly. Immediate, pro-environment, inclusive growth, pro-business decisions are needed at the household, state, regional, national and global levels to put us on a sustainable path. I highlight a set of energy, transportation, and land-use modeling tools and policy opportunities that are consistent with the needed 1.5 degree Celsius objective that also meet social and environmental justice goals. The critical role of decision-making is highlighted through a series of technical, policy, and social justice opportunities. Recent events including the rise of a populist "Green New Deal" ethos, congressional debate over carbon pricing, and the role of environmental justice will be highlighted as critical, potentially 'last best chance' opportunities for climate sanity and meaningful support of much needed action.

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Contact

Kimia Ghobadi