Difference between revisions of "Jim Watson"
(update) |
m |
||
Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
He has also been a Trustee of the [[Koru Foundation]], a renewable energy charity<ref>Jim Watson, "[http://www.sussex.ac.uk/sussexenergygroup/profile8157.html Biography of Jim Watson]", Sussex Energy Group website. Accessed 13/02/09</ref> | He has also been a Trustee of the [[Koru Foundation]], a renewable energy charity<ref>Jim Watson, "[http://www.sussex.ac.uk/sussexenergygroup/profile8157.html Biography of Jim Watson]", Sussex Energy Group website. Accessed 13/02/09</ref> | ||
− | === | + | ===Activities=== |
− | + | ===2009=== | |
===Innovation in Cleaner Energy Technologies=== | ===Innovation in Cleaner Energy Technologies=== | ||
Revision as of 03:37, 17 October 2013
Dr Jim Watson is Professor of Energy Policy at Sussex University (SPRU - Science and Technology Policy Research, The Sussex Energy Group) and research director of the UK Energy Research Centre which is based at I am Research Director of the UK Energy Research Centre, which is based at Imperial College, London.
Contents
Biography
According to the Sussex University website Watson was:
- From Dec 2008 to Jan 2013... Director of the Sussex Energy Group at the University of Sussex. My other roles include:
- Member of the Academy of Science of South Africa panel on green technologies
- Member of DECC and Defra's social science expert panel
- Council Member of the British Institute for Energy Economics
- Member of Carbon Connect's Future Electricity Series steering group
- I have been a specialist adviser to the House of Commons Energy and Climate Change Committee for its inquiry into The UK's Energy Supply: Security or Independence? (Apr-Oct 2011); and the House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee for its inquiries on the Draft Climate Change Bill, Climate Change: The Citizen's Agenda and Energy Efficiency and Fuel Poverty (Mar 2006 to Jun 2009).
- In have also been Chair of the British Institute for Energy Economics in 2011; a member of the Nuffield Council on Bioethics working party on new approaches to biofuels (Sep 2009 to Apr 2011); a Lead Expert with the UK government Foresight project on Sustainable Energy Management and the Built Environment (2007-2009); and a member of the IPPR New Era Economics panel (2010-12).
- From June to August 2008, I was a Visiting Scholar with the Energy Technology Innovation Policy group at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
- I have been at SPRU since 1993, initially as a DPhil research student and since 1997 as a member of staff. My first degree in Electrical Engineering is from Imperial College London. The degree was linked to an engineering apprenticeship with the Rover Group from 1988 to 1992.
He has also been a Trustee of the Koru Foundation, a renewable energy charity[1]
Activities
2009
Innovation in Cleaner Energy Technologies
- I am working with colleagues on UK and international policies to support the development and deployment of sustainable, low carbon energy technologies. This includes work on specific low carbon technologies (see below) and more general research and outreach (e.g. by contributing to a 2008 Sussex Energy Group workshop on UK energy innovation policy)
- I have been studying the development of gas turbine and 'cleaner coal' technologies for power generation since 1993. Current work includes research on the economic and policy issues for cleaner coal technologies including carbon capture and storage (CCS) within a Sussex Energy Group project: Cleaner Fossil Fuels and Carbon Capture and Storage. This includes collaboration with the Managment and Economics Department at the University of Linkoping in Sweden on innovation within the multinational electrical equipment industry.
- Between 2004 and 2006, I led a project funded by the ESRC Sustainable Technologies Programme: Unlocking the Power House. The project was a collaboration with Southampton University and Imperial College. It focused on the possible impact of micro-generation on the relationship between household consumers and energy companies, and the wider implications for energy policy.
Nuclear power
- I am collaborating with Alister Scott on the return of nuclear power as an option in the UK and other countries. This includes an analysis of the potential impacts of new nuclear investment on UK energy security, and the broader consequences for the rest of the energy system.
Energy, Climate Change and Development
I have conducted research on energy and environment in China since the late 1990s. I currently lead a project within the Sussex Energy Group and the Tyndall Centre on Chinese energy futures. I am working with colleagues at SPRU, IDS and TERI (India) on a number of projects focusing on low carbon growth and technology transfer."[2]
Affiliations
Publications
- Jim Watson and Alister Scott, New nuclear power in the UK: A strategy for energy security?, Energy Policy, 2009, vol. 37, issue 12, pages 5094-5104
Contact, Resources and Notes
Contact
- Address:Freeman Centre North Wing, 1st Floor, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton
- Email: W.J.Watson@sussex.ac.uk
- Phone:(01273) 873539 or (01273) 678166
Resources
Notes
- ↑ Jim Watson, "Biography of Jim Watson", Sussex Energy Group website. Accessed 13/02/09
- ↑ Jim Watson, "Biography of Jim Watson", Sussex Energy Group website. Accessed 13/02/09