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Science,
Technology & Society website |
Activities |
EEI Affiliates
Faculty and students involved with the Science, Technology and Society program at Penn State bring a variety of interests and capabilities to energy and environmental activities. These can be broadly categorized into three areas: The Center for Sustainability, Environmental Policy, and Green Design.
Center for Sustainability
At Penn State Center for Sustainability, faculty, students, and
members of the community are searching for more ecologically sustainable
ways of living. Informing this manifold mission are such areas as
ecological design, industrial ecology, community sustainability,
land stewardship, food security, permaculture, biodiversity and right
livelihood. In searching for solutions, necessarily collaborative
and multi-disciplinary, the Center seeks to act as a catalyst for
encouraging the interests and enthusiasm of a wide spectrum of students,
faculty, administrators, staff, and residents from the surrounding
communities.
Environmental Policy Research areas include:
- critical analysis of agricultural, ecological, nutritional, and
political approaches to increasing food availability
- transportation economics and environmental economics
- environmental policy and management, the intersection of trade
policy with environmental interests, and the importance of science
and technology on regulation and conduct of environmental activities.
Green Design
This means not only having environmental objectives but moving them "upstream" to the design stage. In principle, this approach is more cost effective and it also recognizes that all engineering transforms the environment and that all engineering needs to build in environmental objectives. Further, green engineering means working within the limits of the ecosystem. The faculty conducts basic and applied research in:
- Thin-film photovoltaic cells
- Green building design
- Bio-intensive farming
- Living machines
- Solar heating
- Climate change
- Energy conversion
- Policy management of nuclear and molecular science and technology
- Simulations of building energy use
- The social, environmental, and cultural implications of technologies
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