This fall, SLS launched the SLS Fellows Program: Energy Systems for Sustainable Communities (ESSC), with 28 fellows representing all 6 colleges and various other units on campus, and including faculty, research scientists, graduate students, a post doc, and staff.
Over the course of the semester, the ESSC Fellows have a number of gatherings where we meet partners within campus and across the local community. We will also tour campus facilities and will have two gatherings off campus: one at Southface on Equity, Resilience, and
Community in Southeast Energy Systems and a second visit to Social Circle, GA where we will tour the Silicon Ranch solar array facilities and learn about how it was conceived, then
explore that work in the context of the municipality’s efforts to create a livable community. The fellows will also meet in smaller groups to work on their individual projects for the semester related to this topic.
The program will explore questions such as:
How do energy options such as greater use of biomass and utility solar power impact different communities?
How do different energy options improve the resiliency and viability of small communities?
How would changes in grid architecture, such as microgrids, impact communities?
How does climate change alter the energy supply and demand for regions and specifically for the South East?
How do energy systems interact with other key infrastructure systems, particularly food and water systems closely intertwined with energy?
What roles can communities play in the development and deployment of new energy systems?
How do energy policies incentivize or limit community engagement?
How can new developments in energy sources and systems improve opportunities for disadvantaged communities and improve equity, particularly in Georgia, where Atlanta is consistently ranked one of the most inequitable cities in the country?
Towards the end of the semester, the ESSC fellows will write short reflections for the SLS Blog or create case studies for the new SLS Teaching Toolkit studies about what they learned and produced.
Energy Systems for Sustainable Communities (ESSC) Fellows
Baabak Ashuri, Associate Professor, College of Design
Christopher Blackburn, PhD Candidate, Ivan Allen College
Fani Boukouvala, Assistant Professor, College of Engineering
Kate Pride Brown, Assistant Professor, Ivan Allen College
Jason Brown, Assistant Professor, College of Design
Claudio Di Leo, Assistant Professor, College of Engineering
Alice Favero, Lecturer, Ivan Allen College
Roger Jiao, Associate Professor, College of Engineering
Arkadeep Kumar, Ph.D. Student, College of Engineering
Michael Leamy, Associate Professor, College of Engineering
Jung-Ho Lewe, Research Engineer II, College of Engineering
Daniel Matisoff, Associate Professor, Ivan Allen College
Andrew Medford, Assistant Professor, College of Engineering
Kerri Metz, Research Faculty, Strategic Energy Institute
Neda Mohammadi, Postdoc, College of Engineering
Marcela Moreno, Research Project Coordinator II, Strategic Energy Institute
Bob Myers, Lecturer, College of Business
Matthew Oliver, Assistant Professor, Ivan Allen College
Kamran Paynabar, Assistant Professor, College of Engineering
Caleb Robinson, Graduate Research Assistant, College of Computing
Paul Rugambwa, Research Coordinator, College of Engineering
Greg Spiro, Senior Mechanical Engineer, Facilities Management Design & Construction
Supraja Sudharsan, PhD Student, Ivan Allen College
Germán Vergara, Assistant Professor, Ivan Allen College
Tim Welch, Assistant Professor, College of Design
Brian Woodall, Professor, Ivan Allen College
Eunhwa Yang, Assistant Professor, College of Design
Haomin Zhou, Professor, College of Sciences
- Juan Moreno-Cruz, Associate Professor of Economics in Ivan Allen College and a Fellows of the Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems. He serves as faculty co-director for SLS' Fall 2017 Energy Systems for Sustainable Communities Fellows Program, with Matthew Realff (ChBE).