John P. Holdren - THIS EVENT HAS BEEN CANCELLED
Teresa and John Heinz Professor of Environmental Policy, Harvard University
Charles M. and Martha Hitchcock Lectures
March 18, 2020 — 4:10 PMInternational House, Chevron Auditorium — 2299 Piedmont Avenue, UC Berkeley Campus
About the Lecture This lecture focuses on The Arctic and its warming two to four times faster than the global average, transforming landscapes, the Arctic Ocean, and Arctic ecosystems. One of the biggest impacts may be those that affect us all: … Continued
International House, Chevron Auditorium - 2299 Piedmont Avenue, UC Berkeley Campus Berkeley Graduate Lectures [email protected] false MM/DD/YYYYAbout the Lecture
This lecture focuses on The Arctic and its warming two to four times faster than the global average, transforming landscapes, the Arctic Ocean, and Arctic ecosystems. One of the biggest impacts may be those that affect us all: melting Arctic land ice contributing to global sea-level rise and greenhouse-gas emissions from thawing permafrost accelerating temperature increases worldwide.
About John P. Holdren
Dr. Holdren is the Teresa and John Heinz Professor at the John F. Kennedy School of Government and the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Harvard University. He was co-founder and co-leader of UC Berkeley’s interdisciplinary Energy and Resources Group from 1973 to 1996, and from 2009 until 2017 he was President Obama’s Science Advisor and Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, becoming the longest-serving incumbent in the history of those positions.
Trained at MIT and Stanford in aerospace engineering and theoretical plasma physics, Dr. Holdren’s work over the course of five decades has spanned space technology, thermonuclear fusion, comparative assessment of energy options, causes and consequences of global environmental change, nuclear arms control and non-proliferation, and science and technology advice for a host of national and international leaders. He has authored over 300 articles and papers and has co-authored and co-edited more than twenty books and book-length reports.
His honors include one of the first MacArthur Foundation Prizes (1981), the Tyler Prize for Environment (2000), the Heinz Prize for Public Policy (2001), the Moynihan Prize of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences (2018), and the Order of the Rising Sun from the government of Japan (2019). He is a member of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the U.S. National Academy of Engineering, the American Philosophical Society, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a Foreign Member of the Royal Society of London.