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Harvard meets Tübingen - Energy Economics and Innovation
Chan, Gabriel A. (2010)
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mla
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Chan G. "Harvard meets Tübingen - Energy Economics and Innovation.", timms video, Universität Tübingen (2010): https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100923_003_summit_0001. Accessed 09 May 2024.
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Chan, G. (2010). Harvard meets Tübingen - Energy Economics and Innovation. timms video: Universität Tübingen. Retrieved May 09, 2024 from the World Wide Web https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100923_003_summit_0001
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Chan, G. (2010). Harvard meets Tübingen - Energy Economics and Innovation [Online video]. 23 September. Available at: https://timms.uni-tuebingen.de:443/tp/UT_20100923_003_summit_0001 (Accessed: 9 May 2024).
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title: Harvard meets Tübingen - Energy Economics and Innovation
alt. title: World Student Environmental Summit
creator: Chan, Gabriel A. (author)
subjects: Tübingen, Universität, Politikwissenschaft, World Student Environmental Summit, Energiepolitik, Harvard University, Energieökonomik, Innovationsforschung, John F. Kennedy School of Government
description: Gabriel A. Chan: "Energy and Economics", 23.9.2010, WSES 2010
abstract: Gabe Chan, a PhD student in Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, discussed the economics and policy of technological change in the energy sector with respect to the challenge of global climate change. The highly uncertain and regionally uneven threats of climate change pose risks to the earth's population groups that call for dramatic shifts in the way we produce and utilize energy. These risks imply the need for new modes of behavior, and perhaps more importantly, the deployment of advanced technologies. Historically, advanced technologies have entered into markets under the principles of two forces: the "supply" of new scientific and technical understand, and the "demand" for new or better goods and services. Using these two explanations for technical innovation, I will discuss the role that governments around the world are assuming in attempts to deploy energy technologies to mitigate climate change. At the core of the challenge for policy makers lie two realities: 1) The supply of new scientific and technical understanding may continue to move at it's own pace -- governed primarily by the natural frontier of scientific and technical possibilities. This rate may be insufficient for the challenges posed by climate change. 2) The diffuse, public benefits of averting climate change may remain 2 insufficiently organized to create relevant demand for climate change-mitigating technologies. Gabriel Chan focuses on recent policy developments in the United States in response to the climate and energy challenges that are shared by many other countries.
publisher: ZDV Universität Tübingen
contributor: World Student Environmental Summit (producer)
creation date: 2010-09-23
dc type: image
localtype: video
identifier: UT_20100923_003_summit_0001
language: eng
rights: Url: https://timmsstatic.uni-tuebingen.de/jtimms/TimmsDisclaimer.html?638508638366673843