Caltech: Caltech Energy 10 (CE10) Aims to Develop the Roadmap Toward a 50 Percent Reduction in U.S. Global Warming Gas Emissions by 2030

How do we cut U.S. global warming gas emissions by 50 percent within the next 10 years? For starters, be a part of the solution: jump on Zoom for the Caltech Energy 10 (CE10) public program on June 14–15 to join researchers as well as industry and government leaders as they outline the steps needed to meet this ambitious goal.

“We are seeing the effects of climate change ramp up faster than expected, and there is widening consensus that the time for action is now,” says Harry A. Atwater, Otis Booth Leadership Chair of the Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS), Howard Hughes Professor of Applied Physics and Materials Science, and director of the Liquid Sunlight Alliance. “Rewiring U.S. energy production and consumption is one way to tackle this worsening issue head-on and in a practical way.”

Atwater is a co-organizer of CE10 alongside Lambertus Hesselink (MS ’72, PhD ’77), a professor at Stanford University, and David Welch, a founding partner of 4-Good Ventures. Sponsors of CE10 include Caltech, EAS, the Resnick Sustainability Institute, Stanford University, and 4-Good Ventures.

CE10 builds on Caltechers’ decades-long track record of leadership on environmental issues. Caltech-affiliated researchers pinpointed internal combustion engines as one of the key creators of Southern California’s smog and pioneered the development of electric vehicles, for example; more recently, Caltech scientists have done pioneering work related to carbon sequestration and solar fuels, and the development of next-generation climate-change modeling methods.

CE10 will address the fundamental changes needed in the U.S. energy ecosystem through two components. First is the CE10 public program, a series of free, livestreamed talks on June 14 and 15 that will address the transformations needed to reverse and slow the effects of climate change. Speakers include Jerry Brown, former governor of California; Steven Chu, former U.S. secretary of energy; Sally Benson, current White House deputy director for energy; Kristen Siemen, chief sustainability officer at General Motors; and other experts in the energy and government sectors.

The second component, to take place June 15 and 16, is the invitation-only CE10 workshop, which will assemble key decision makers from the energy ecosystem on Caltech’s campus. The workshop aims to generate a new strategic roadmap for reducing global warming gas emissions that can realistically enlist broad public support.

“Climate change is certainly the grand challenge of our time,” says Atwater. “Instead of focusing on long-term solutions, CE10 will focus on delivering tangible actions that can be practically done within a 10-year time scale.”