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.

 3:35pm  Full details
Following open relationships with global nations that started in 1778, Hawai'i experienced a rapid decline in the Hawaiian population and their agroecological management systems. As part of efforts to redefine the contemporary food system of Hawai'i - one that relies on 90% imported foods and a weak local agricultural sector - we have worked to bring indigenous knowledge and practices regarding sustainable agroecosystems forward.

 1:30pm  Full details
Please join us as we discuss the New York Times Bestseller, “How to Be an Antiracist” by Ibram X. Kendi. Discussion will focus on chapters: 1–5, 7 and 8. Panelists: Joshua Inwood, Associate Professor of Geography and African Studies Cierra Chandler, Ph.D. candidate, Materials Science and Engineering Bryttani Wooten, Senior, Meteorology and Atmospheric Science Password for event: 217040
 1:00pm  Full details
Sustainability Series for Commonwealth Employees The series is intended to give commonwealth employees opportunities to hear from subject matter experts and receive updates on each topic to enrich their knowledge while engaging in group conversations.  The series is intended to give commonwealth employees opportunities to hear from subject matter experts and receive updates on each topic to enrich their knowledge while engaging in group conversations. 

 4:00pm  Full details
Energy for the Future Seminar: Modelling Multiphysics Gas-EOR Process in Tight Oil Reservoirs with Yu-Shu Wu; Reservoirs Modeling Chair and Director of (EMG); Colorado School of Mines, USA
 4:00pm  Full details
The Science and Values in Climate Risk Management Speaker Series hosts invited speakers to generate discussion bridging the scientific and ethical sides of climate change research. The speakers will present new ideas designed for an interdisciplinary audience. This series is organized by the Center for Climate Risk Management and the Climate and Sustainability Ethics Initiative in the Rock Ethics Institute, which is convened by Casey Helgeson, Klaus Keller, and Nancy Tuana.
 1:00pm  Full details
State Review of Oil and Natural Gas Environmental Regulations and Its Benefits webinar will introduce Ryan Steadley, the Executive Director of STRONGER, an acronym for State Review of Oil and Natural Gas Environmental Regulations. STRONGER is a multi-stakeholder nonprofit organization whose mission is to enhance protection of human health and the environment by educating and providing services for the continuous improvement of state upstream oil and gas regulatory programs.

 4:00pm  Full details
Decoding Enhancer Function In The Developing Mammalian Brain with Alexander Nord, University of California, Davis
 4:00pm  Full details
Civil and Environmental Engineering Virtual Seminar Series: Scientific Machine Learning for Efficient Computational Design of Engineering Systems with Hadi Meidani, Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
 3:30pm  Full details
This talk will detail the methodology used to generate a physics based country-wide probabilistic flood and hurricane risk model comprised of 50,000 years of statistically simulated precipitation and hurricane events.  This model is appropriate for use in establishing material risk at high resolution in the continental US (10m x 10m resolution), a model which is in use by the insurance industry and by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA).  In addition to providing general comments on the methodology, we will also discuss how climate change effects losses and model verifi
 2:00pm  Full details
The short-term interests of some financial actors can conflict with the long-term objectives of companies. In this presentation we explore the world of activist hedge funds. Results from a series of studies show that activist hedge funds unequivocally detract from the pursuit of business sustainability. Activist hedge funds tend to target more socially responsible companies, including those with more demographically diverse boards.
 12:00pm  Full details
Madagascar figures prominently in debates over contemporary and past human exploitation of island biomes. It has long been argued that initial human arrival on Madagascar precipitated catastrophic changes in local ecologies, including, famously, the extinction of a suite of megafauna. Despite this starkly portrayed shift from an uninhabited island to one devastated by human settlement, our diachronic understanding of Madagascar’s coupled human-natural systems remains limited.
 11:15am  Full details
Fall 2020 ESSC Brown Bag Series with Xingchao Chen (XC), Meteorology and Atmospheric Science, Penn State To maintain social distancing as much as possible during the novel coronavirus pandemic, seminars will be conducted via Zoom this semester. A hyperlink to the Zoom meeting for each seminar is given in the schedule below in the row corresponding to that seminar. Unless otherwise noted, all seminars are from 11:15am - 12:30pm Zoom link: https://psu.zoom.us/j/98035610152

 4:00pm  Full details
Amanda Hendrix, Planetary Science Institute to present Using UV Spectroscopy to study Solar System Worlds
 1:00pm  Full details
Graduate Student Poster Session is part of the Penn State Future of Bioenergy and Biorenewables Workshop, presented by Penn State Center for Biorenewables
 1:00pm  Full details
Throughout the country, Engineers and developers are facing the same challenge; balancing project development needs while meeting the stormwater management requirements. Over the past few decades, stormwater management requirements have become more complex as flooding, drought, and ecological damage to watersheds have become more apparent. Although there are regional nuances, stormwater management goals can be generalized into three main categories: volume control, rate control, and water quality.
 12:00pm  Full details
The Water Insights Seminar Series engages the University and broader community in collaborative learning and discussion about critical water challenges from local to global scales.   All seminars are scheduled for Tuesdays from 12:00 - 1:00 pm and will be held via Zoom. Zoom room open from 11:30 for setup and log-in. Meetings (video, audio, and chat) will be recorded. No waiting room, and no passcode. Participants will be muted automatically upon entry.
 12:00am  Full details
This year's Materials Day will be highlighted by the theme The Convergence of Materials and Life. Materials and devices on and inside the body will lead to better diagnostics, monitoring, and therapy. Join us virtually for a unique and informative Materials Day experience.

 6:30pm  Full details
The effects of climate change are already being felt across the Pennsylvania in the form of more severe weather, flooding, changes in our forests and other ecosystems, and human health impacts. How we respond over the next decade will determine how severe those impacts become, and a key to our success will be the leaders of tomorrow – today’s college students. Please join Secretary Dunn, Mr. Czarnecki, Mr. Newton, and other DCNR staff in a conversation about Pennsylvania’s changing climate and your role in helping to shape our future.
 4:00pm  Full details
Part of the EESI EarthTalks series “Changemaking made EESI: Fostering inclusive research communities in the Earth and environmental sciences”
 3:35pm  Full details
Hairy root disease (HRD) caused by Agrobacterium rhizogenes is a problematic disease leading to substantial losses in marketable yield in hydroponically grown tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum). Growers use strict hygiene protocols and sanitation, relying on hydrogen peroxide and other sanitizers to clean hydroponic systems after disease outbreaks, however, this is an expensive and time-consuming process. Biological control is emerging as a possible solution to this troubling problem.