Baker Briefing: Accelerating Clean, Affordable Electricity
Table of Contents
Author(s)
Daniel S. Cohan
Baker Institute Rice Faculty Scholar | Professor of Civil and Environmental EngineeringDavid M. Satterfield
Director, Baker Institute for Public Policy | Janice and Robert McNair Chair in Public PolicyClean electricity technologies are here and they’re affordable. So why does most of our power in the U.S. still come from fossil fuels? Daniel Cohan, a civil and environmental engineering professor at Rice University and a Baker Institute Rice faculty scholar, joined Baker Briefing to explain how bureaucratic bottlenecks have led to a backlog of wind, solar, and battery storage power projects that could, if built, revolutionize the grid and greatly reduce the emissions that contribute to climate change and air pollution.
Subscribe and listen to Baker Briefing on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts. For more on this topic, read “Prioritize Reforms to Accelerate the Shift to Clean Electricity,” written by Cohan for “Election 2024: Policy Playbook,” a series by Rice University and the Baker Institute to inform U.S. and Texas policymaking before and after the election.
This conversation was recorded on Nov. 1, 2024. A transcript of this episode is available here. This text was AI-generated and has not been through editorial review.
Discussants
Daniel S. Cohan, Ph.D.
Baker Institute Rice Faculty Scholar; Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Rice University
The Honorable David M. Satterfield
Director, Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy; Janice and Robert McNair Chair in Public Policy
About Baker Briefing
Baker Briefing is a podcast that tackles the most critical foreign and domestic policy issues of the day in conversations with experts at the Baker Institute. Hosted by the Honorable David M. Satterfield, director of the Baker Institute, new episodes are released weekly.
Attend a Live Recording
Certain episodes of Baker Briefing are recorded in front of a live audience at Rice University in Houston, Texas. You can attend live recordings by joining the Baker Roundtable, the Baker Institute’s membership forum.
This material may be quoted or reproduced without prior permission, provided appropriate credit is given to the author and Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy. The views expressed herein are those of the individual author(s), and do not necessarily represent the views of Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.