You are here
The Potential of Hybrid Clean Energy Systems to Advance Energy and Climate Justice
by guest author Marta Darby, an attorney whose practice focuses on accelerating an equitable transition to clean energy
April 2022 Research Review
Residents in disproportionately burdened communities—frequently lower-income communities of color—endure greater air, water, and soil pollution, as well as other environmental harms. Systemic barriers, including persistent structural racism, often have left such groups with fewer resources to protect themselves and to build resilience. Climate change is exacerbating these longstanding injustices, leaving historically marginalized communities even more vulnerable and more at risk for energy insecurity.
The clean energy transition presents an opportunity to work toward alleviating such harms. In particular, new research showcases how coupling existing state efforts (1) to accelerate renewable energy adoption in underserved low-income communities and (2) to replace aging gas distribution networks with district heating and cooling could amplify the benefits of such efforts. Such a holistic approach could transform overburdened communities into high energy-performance communities that are safer and more resilient.
-
Negative Emission Technologies and Land Use

by John Katzenberger, Aspen Global Change Institute
December 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
Electrifying the Building Sector: Recent Research Perspectives on Available Technologies, Policies, and Mitigation Strategies

by Emily Jack-Scott, Aspen Global Change Institute
September 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
Direct Air Capture and Storage: Should We Be Driving With One Foot on the Gas and the Other on the Brake?

by John Katzenberger, Aspen Global Change Institute
September 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
Developing Low-Emission Technologies for the Chemical Industry: A Perspective From Within the Industry

by Brigitta Huckestein (BASF)
June 2019 Quarterly Research Review - Guest Perspective
-
Sharing Our Hopes, Fears, and Solutions to Solve Climate Change While Creating a Better Society: The Deep Decarbonization Pathways Design Framework

by Chris Bataille (IDDRI.org)
June 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
Sea Level Rise: The Past as an Indicator of the Future

by John Katzenberger
March 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
Self-Driving Vehicles and the Environment

By guest authors Morteza Taiebat and Ming Xu, University of Michigan
March 2019 Quarterly Research Review
-
The Role of Managed Retreat in Adapting to Sea Level Rise

By guest authors Katharine J. Mach and Miyuki Hino, Stanford University
December 2018 Quarterly Research Review
-
Improving Risk Assessment of Extreme Events Across Past, Present, and Future

December 2018 Quarterly Research Review
-
What Nature’s Feedbacks and Tipping Points Portend for Our Future

September 2018 Quarterly Research Review
Pages
About AGCI
AGCI has become an intellectual proving ground, a ferment for new ideas and concepts, and a place where the different disciplines actually talk, and progress. Hal Harvey
What We Do
AGCI has been the most prominent place for developing interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary dialogues between scientists and practitioners.Guy Brasseur
Get Involved
We are called to be architects of the future, not its victims. R. Buckminster Fuller