By David Brand
As pump prices for gasoline set record highs in the United States and crude oil becomes more expensive than it has been almost at any time since the 1991 Gulf War, Cornell is hosting an engineering conference April 15-17 on Energy Demand and Sustainable Development.
The conference will feature talks on the applications and business potential of new technologies in energy and sustainable development by alumni who are leading energy industry figures and faculty members who are leading the research on campus. They will discuss a range of issues involved in formulating national energy policy, including the role of advanced technologies, providing low-cost electricity and the use of ethanol as a fuel. The conference also includes a research poster session by students.
Open only to registrants, the conference is sponsored by the Cornell Society of Engineers (CSE) and the Cornell College of Engineering, in collaboration with the Cornell Center for the Environment and the Johnson Graduate School of Management.
The conference will kick off April 15 with the delivery of the 2004 Hatfield Address and William Ohaus Memorial Lecture by Jeffrey R. Immelt, chairman of the board and CEO of General Electric Co. at 4:30 p.m. in Call Alumni Auditorium of Kennedy Hall. (Read related story.)
The conference will move to the Statler Hotel, Barnes Hall and other campus locations on April 16 and 17 for discussions by a number of leading figures in energy innovation. Among them:
For more information and talk locations, call the CSE office at 255-9920.
Registration is required and can be made online at http://www.cse.cornell.edu or by e-mail to engr_cse@cornell.edu. The registration fee of $199 for all sessions and meals or $119 for technical sessions only is refundable through April 10, less $25 to cover administration costs. Registration for alumni graduating between 1998 and 2003 is $149, including meals. Œ
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