Difference between revisions of "David MacKay"
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:David is the author of the critically acclaimed book, ''Sustainable Energy – without the hot air'', which aims to help people understand the numbers around sustainable energy. | :David is the author of the critically acclaimed book, ''Sustainable Energy – without the hot air'', which aims to help people understand the numbers around sustainable energy. | ||
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+ | ==Pro-nuclear activities and views== | ||
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+ | :DECC’s MacKay said that in a high nuclear scenario with 75 gigawatts of nuclear capacity, nuclear could provide up to 86 percent of the UK’s electricity, providing 525 terawatt hours (tWh) per year out of a total of 610 tWh, a level he noted is “comparable to France.” Nuclear today provides about 18 percent of the UK’s electricity. | ||
==Affiliations== | ==Affiliations== | ||
+ | *[[Ad Hoc Nuclear Research and Development Advisory Board]] | ||
==Contact, Resources and Notes== | ==Contact, Resources and Notes== |
Revision as of 03:19, 30 October 2013
This article is part of the Nuclear Spin project of Spinwatch. |
David MacKay was appointed as Chief Scientific Advisor to the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) on 1st October 2009.
Contents
Background
From his biography on DECC website:
- David MacKay studied Natural Sciences at Trinity College, then went to Caltech to complete a PhD in Computation and Neural Systems. In 1992 he returned to Cambridge as a Royal Society research fellow at Darwin College. In 1995 he became a university lecturer in the Department of Physics, where he was promoted in 1999 to a Readership and in 2003 to a Professorship in Natural Philosophy. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 2009.
- In 2013 David Mackay was appointed Regius Professor in Engineering at the University of Cambridge. Regius Professorships are Royal academic titles, created by the monarch. The Engineering role is a new Regius Professorship, announced in 2011 to celebrate the Duke of Edinburgh’s 34 years as Chancellor of the University.
- David is the author of the critically acclaimed book, Sustainable Energy – without the hot air, which aims to help people understand the numbers around sustainable energy.
Pro-nuclear activities and views
- DECC’s MacKay said that in a high nuclear scenario with 75 gigawatts of nuclear capacity, nuclear could provide up to 86 percent of the UK’s electricity, providing 525 terawatt hours (tWh) per year out of a total of 610 tWh, a level he noted is “comparable to France.” Nuclear today provides about 18 percent of the UK’s electricity.