Hot Topic: Sustainable Energy | Printer Friendly |
Expert Profile: A Conversation on Sustainable Energy
Filled up your car lately? Paid that jet-fuel surcharge? Worried about home heating bills? Ouch, ouch, ouch. Whether it's oil or coal or even nuclear, the demand for power and energy is soaring, just as the industry's infrastructure is aging and supplies are tightening. Individuals, service-sector businesses and industry - all over the world - just can't get enough. Is this a problem or an opportunity? For our profiled expert this month, Wanda Reder, it's both. Reder, vice-president of S&C Electric Co.'s Power Systems Services division and president of the IEEE Power & Energy Society, says sustainable energy is the answer. And IEEE members, she says, are front-and-center in efforts to develop such alternative-energy sources. To help IEEE navigate this wave of the future, Reder recently led a successful drive to modernize the name of the former Power Engineering Society to the Power & Energy Society (PES). "The challenges we face are very complex, requiring multiple disciplines", she says. "The new name better positions us to work with all professionals whose knowledge and experience are needed for industry problem-solving." IEEE Engaging the World recently sat down with Reder to discuss sustainable energy and IEEE's role in bringing expertise to a solution for the problem: IEEE : The new name, IEEE Power & Energy Society, better reflects the cross-disciplinary world we live in, correct? Reder : Yes. With more than 22,000 members, PES represents a diverse range of interests within the industry, including generation, transmission, distribution and utilization. We have a strong presence throughout the world, with more than 180 active chapters. But while PES is strong, there is little doubt that our industry is at a critical point, facing numerous challenges, like an increasing world population, demands for higher living standards, and a pressing need to reduce pollution. Furthermore, we must avert global warming and most likely change the energy mix away from fossil fuels with expanded development of sustainable energies such as wind, solar, biomass, geothermal, nuclear and energy from the oceans. IEEE : It's about more than the technology, it's about the people behind the technology? Reder : To address these challenges, we will need to incorporate numerous new technologies - and the people who know them inside and out. These likely involve energy efficiency, plug-in hybrids, renewables, smart grids with distributed generation, clean coal technologies, storage techniques and the ability to capture carbon. There is no silver bullet. We need all of these technologies, all of these people, all of their knowledge, and more. Clearly the industry's needs are changing, and PES has to change right along with them. The energy aspect of the name change appeals to the societal interests of potential members, allowing us to respond to an increasing need for power and energy professionals. IEEE : Power and energy, they're not so straight-forward anymore, are they?
Reder:
It’s an interesting confluence of
events that’s brought us to this point. Due
to increasing demand and aging infrastructure,
we again are facing the need for large capital
investments in generation and transmission. Unlike
in the past, though, things are very
different. You can’t just build a classic
coal plant anymore and expect not to be
criticized for it. This expansion needs to be
done while incorporating renewable generation,
adopting new computing and communications
technologies, rewarding energy-efficient behaviors
and addressing climate-change concerns.
Furthermore, our expectations of electric
reliability are rising, and carbon-policy changes
will undoubtedly impact how we supply, deliver
and use energy. |


