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dam-l Energy research down/LS



 
                             Dangerous Decline in Energy Research "A Dark Path"

                             PRINCETON, New Jersey, August 3, 1999 (ENS) - Low research into energy technology is jeopardizing the
                             world's ability to cope with environmental problems and the growing demand for energy, according to research
                             undertaken at Princeton University.

                             Money spent in industrialized nations on improving the use of energy resources has dropped to a 20-year low, while
                             the investment in other types of research has soared, they say.

                                                        Daniel Kammen is assistant professor of public and
                                                        international affairs and director of the Program in
                                                        Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy in the
                                                        Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International
                                                        Affairs at Princeton University. (Photo courtesy
                                                        Princeton University)

                                                        These cutbacks "should sound an alarm," say Robert Margolis and
                                                        Daniel Kammen of Princeton in the July 30 issue of "Science," the
                                                        journal of the American Association for the Advancement of
                                                        Science. "The wholesale dismantling of large portions of the
                                                        industrial world's energy R&D infrastructure could seriously impair
                                                        our ability to envision and develop new technologies to meet
                                                        emerging challenges," Kammen and Margolis wrote.

                                                        The top ten nations have dropped energy research and development
                                                        by 39 percent since 1980. The Princeton researchers say the U.S.
                                                        spent $11.9 billion in 1979, but it dropped $4.3 billion in 1996
                                                        (constant dollars).

                                                        There is increasing evidence that the environmental costs of relying
                             on combustion energy technologies are unacceptably high, Margolis and Kammen argue. New energy technologies
                             are needed to address the threats of pollution and global climate change, and the modest reduction of carbon
                             emissions spelled out in the recent Kyoto accord requires more aggressive measures than are currently available.

                             "The energy sector's extremely low R&D intensity is a cause for concern not only today, but for decades to come,"
                             argue the researchers, because it takes many years for R&D investment to pay off.

                             Margolis and Kammen gauged the extent of the problem in two ways. First, they looked at how many new patents
                             are being issued. Generating patents is an important trait for industries that want to expand their productivity and
                             create new opportunities.

                             In general, the number of new patents in the U.S. is up. Counting all industries, such as medicine, industrial
                             chemicals and transportation, research and development spending rose from $100 billion to $200 billion between
                             1976 and 1996.

                             The number of patents closely tracked that increase, going from 70,000 to 110,000 annually over the same period.

                             In the energy sector, research and development spending numbers of new patents were also closely linked. Patents
                             rose from 102 in 1976 to a high of 228 in 1981, but then declined to a low of 54 in 1994.

                             "The trend is clearly going in the wrong direction and there appears to be a strong connection between the inputs and
                             the payoffs," Margolis said.

                             "If we don't increase the funds for energy technology R&D, then we will be heading down a dark path," says
                             Margolis. "The threats are serious."

                             Princeton University is one of the principal research centers in the world for one potential alternative energy source:
                             nuclear fusion. Scientists at Princeton's Plasma Physics Laboratory are starting tests on a new generation of fusion
                             generators. Margolis and Kammen are not affiliated with the Plasma Physics Laboratory and their study did not
                             specifically address fusion research.

                             Princeton also conducts research into alternative energy sources through its Center for Energy and Environmental
                             Studies. 

                             © Environment News Service (ENS) 1999. All Rights Reserved.  

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