Past Events: Penn State Energy and Environment Calendar Archive

You're viewing an archived collection of past energy and environment events from around Penn State and beyond. Please visit our Event Calendar to view current and upcoming events.

 11:00am – 12:00pm  Online  Full details
2024 Women Advancing River Research Seminar Series All seminars will be presented online live at 11:00 a.m. ET on the third Thursday of each month. Seminar recordings will be posted later. Please register in advance for all talks. "Integrating Hydrologic Modeling and Field Data with Local Knowledge Holders" Kendra Kaiser, Boise State University (U.S.) Gene-Hua Crystal Ng, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities (U.S.)
 All day  Carnegie Mellon University, Cohon University Center, Pittsburgh, PA  Full details
Hosted by Carnegie Mellon’s Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation, CMU Energy Week 2024 will bring energy and sustainability leaders, including scholars, investors and entrepreneurs from across the nation to Carnegie Mellon University to combine forces and exchange ideas on the best paths to decarbonizing transportation. CMU Energy Week 2024 discussions will interrogate problems and work toward constructing an ambitious vision to reimagine how we move things, move people and move equitably in our clean-energy future.

 7:00 – 9:30pm  Online  Full details
When the world seems to be ending, what do you do in response? Where do you put your grief, your anger, your frustration, and your desire to act? What happens when we don’t have constructive channels for our emotions?
 1:00 – 2:00pm  Online  Full details
Digesters aren't only about animals and energy – they can profoundly impact cropping systems and the nutrient dynamics of our agricultural sector. Join C-CHANGE: Managing Digestate for Crop Production and the Environment to learn about new findings in this important area.
 12:00 – 1:00pm  Online  Full details
Nature is a complex, interconnected system that supports all of life. Whether we live in the city or the countryside, natural systems support is real and significant. Natural system services provide millions of dollars every year in recreational revenues and avoid costs for governments, businesses, and residents. Nature’s benefits impact our quality of life, health, cost of living, sense of place, and economy. These benefits are reliably delivered 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Once lost, these benefits are expensive and difficult to replace.
 All day  Carnegie Mellon University, Cohon University Center, Pittsburgh, PA  Full details
Hosted by Carnegie Mellon’s Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation, CMU Energy Week 2024 will bring energy and sustainability leaders, including scholars, investors and entrepreneurs from across the nation to Carnegie Mellon University to combine forces and exchange ideas on the best paths to decarbonizing transportation. CMU Energy Week 2024 discussions will interrogate problems and work toward constructing an ambitious vision to reimagine how we move things, move people and move equitably in our clean-energy future.

 11:00 – 11:45am  3rd Floor Café Commons of the Millennium Science Complex  Full details
For many materials the direction (or orientation) of the crystal planes impacts the overall properties.  The simplest example is the difference between a single-crystalline and polycrystalline sample.  But even polycrystalline samples need not be completely random; some crystalline planes may preferentially align with certain directions.  Such a sample is said to be oriented or textured.
 10:00 – 11:00am  3rd Floor Café Commons of the Millennium Science Complex  Full details
Digital health is inherently data-driven. However, data itself is not adequate. Successful digital health applications require a human-centered approach that transforms data into user experience, empathy, and inclusivity. In this talk, I will focus on how to create digital health applications by integrating a human-centered and data-driven approach. I will also reflect on two ongoing digital health projects: creating supportive financial technologies  for marginalized communities and using generative AI to provide personalized health interventions.
 10:00 – 11:00am  3rd Floor Café Commons of the Millennium Science Complex  Full details
Hydrogen is the simplest molecule in the universe, yet efficient H2 activation, utilization and storage present considerable technological challenges that must be overcome if we are to realize the “green” energy transition.  One such phenomenon is “H spillover”, in which H2 is adsorbed (usually on a metal) and then transferred to a metal oxide or carbon surface.  Once off the metal, the H becomes highly mobile, scampering freely across the surface.  We recently provided the first quantitative measures of H spillover, which leads to the surprising conclusion that spill
 All day  Carnegie Mellon University, Cohon University Center, Pittsburgh, PA  Full details
Hosted by Carnegie Mellon’s Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation, CMU Energy Week 2024 will bring energy and sustainability leaders, including scholars, investors and entrepreneurs from across the nation to Carnegie Mellon University to combine forces and exchange ideas on the best paths to decarbonizing transportation. CMU Energy Week 2024 discussions will interrogate problems and work toward constructing an ambitious vision to reimagine how we move things, move people and move equitably in our clean-energy future.

 4:00 – 5:00pm  112 Walker Building or Online  Full details
Rising global temperatures and the urban heat island effect can amplify heat-related health risks to urban residents. Cities are considering various heat adaptation actions to improve public health, enhance social equity, and cope with future conditions beyond past experience. We present the City-Heat Equity Adaptation Tool (City-HEAT), which suggests optimal investments for mitigating urban heat and reducing health impacts through modifications of built (cool roofs/pavements) and natural (urban afforestation) environments and reductions of people’s heat exposure (cooling centers).
 12:15 – 1:15pm  108 Wartik Laboratory  Full details
Developmental transitions impact ecology and evolution by altering the way plants interact with their environment. Studies of germination and flowering show that developmental timing has significant impacts on plant fitness and performance, but very little attention has been given to the juvenile-to-adult transition: vegetative phase change. My research works to understand how the timing of vegetative phase change, and the developmental phase a plant is in when exposed to abiotic stress, impact the plant’s ability to respond to these stressors.
 8:00 – 9:00am  Online  Full details
With the rise in forest carbon programs, the focus of some forest managers has shifted towards extending harvest rotations and focusing management on carbon sequestration at the cost of other considerations. During Having it All: Balancing Carbon, Forest Health, and Other Goals, participants will learn how forest managers can think about maintaining functioning forests while meeting multiple goals like storing carbon, creating wildlife habitat, and forest health.

 3:30 – 4:30pm  112 Walker Building or Online  Full details
Harvey J. Miller, professor of geography at Ohio State University, will give the talk "Mapping Columbus' Ghost Neighborhoods: Using AI and GIS to Create 3D Models of Neighborhoods Damaged by Urban Highways and Urban Renewal in the 20th Century" at the annual E. Willard and Ruby S. Miller Endowed Lecture at 3:30 p.m. on Friday, March 15.
 All day  HUB-Robeson Center and Online  Full details
Join your colleagues to share your work, learn, be inspired, and network across the Penn State Water Community. This event highlights the interdisciplinary nature of water-related research, education, communication, service, and outreach. The conference will feature:

 4:00 – 5:00pm  C213 Coal Utilization Laboratory  Full details
The EMS Energy Institute presents the 2024 Energy Xchange Seminar Series. This presentation will feature Erica Smithwick, Director of the Earth and Environmental Systems Institute and Distinguished Professor of Geography, with her presentation titled, "Penn State's Climate Consortium: Partnerships for People and the Planet". This event is free and parking is available at the Institute at 4 p.m. 
 12:00 – 1:30pm  Online  Full details
Markus Drouven serves as the Technical Director of DOE’s 3-year, $5MM produced water optimization initiative, "Project PARETO". In 2021, the U.S. Department of Energy launched "Project PARETO". PARETO is designed to help organizations with produced water management (e.g., transport, treat, store, inject and/or reuse produced water from onshore oil & gas operations).
 All day  HUB-Robeson Center and Online  Full details
Join your colleagues to share your work, learn, be inspired, and network across the Penn State Water Community. This event highlights the interdisciplinary nature of water-related research, education, communication, service, and outreach. The conference will feature:

 7:00 – 8:00pm  HUB Flex Theatre or Online  Full details
Indigenous scholar Tiokasin Ghosthorse of the Cheyenne River Lakota Nation, South Dakota, will explore Indigenous cosmology, intuitive ways of knowing, cultural etymologies, and the influence of language in relationships. Campus and community members are invited to join the conversation on Mar. 13 at 7 p.m. in the HUB Flex Theatre or online via Zoom. Guests attending the in-person discussion will be invited to join a reception with refreshments and ongoing discussion.
 4:30 – 5:30pm  Stuckeman Family Building Jury Space or Online  Full details
Jean Yang, landscape designer, urban planner, and educator, joins the Stuckeman School's Lecture + Exhibit Series for a Department of Landscape Architecture Bracken Lecture. Titled “Community in Landscapes,” Yang’s talk will discuss how humans create their built environment and how it, in turn, shapes them.