The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Brett Hauser, CEO at Greenlots and Co-founder at Open Charge Alliance, to give a talk titled "The future of electric transportation: Infrastructure considerations to accelerate EV adoption."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Dana Harmon, Executive Director of the Texas Energy Poverty Research Institute, to give a talk titled "Addressing Energy Poverty in Texas."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Richard Chuchla, Director of the Energy and Earth Resources program in the Jackson School of Geosciences, to give a talk titled "Shale: The Revolution That Wasn’t."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Peter Cramton, Professor of Economics at University of Cologne and University of Maryland to give a talk titled "Renewables and Electricity Market Design."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Michael Nicholas, Senior Researcher at The International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) to give a talk titled "Transitioning to electricity as a fuel: challenges and opportunities for remaking our refueling infrastructure."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes Robert Hebner, Director, Center for Electromechanics, The University of Texas at Austin, to give a talk titled "What We Measure Matters – US Electricity in the Future."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes David Hurlbut, Senior Analyst at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, to give a talk titled “Creative Destruction and the Electric Utility of the Future."
The UT Energy Symposium welcomes UT Austin Economics Professor Eugenio Miravete to give a talk titled "Fuel Taxation, Emissions Policy, and Competitive Advantage in the Diffusion of European Diesel Automobiles."
The UT Energy Symposium kicks off the semester by welcoming Professor Raj Patel of the LBJ School of Public Affairs to give a talk titled "How Energy Fits into the History of the World in Seven Cheap Things."
Driven by the commercial availability of wide bandgap (WBG) power devices, this is an exciting time for power electronics community. Future power electronics systems will not only be much more efficient, but also smaller and lighter than before. This will have huge impacts to a whole array of industries from mobile computing, to data center to electric transportations. The increased voltage and speed in these power devices are also making it possible now to solve some of the greatest challenges facing the power grid with advanced medium voltage power electronics technology.