Sitemap Find what you need quickly

Close

Larry Staudt: Ireland's Energy Future

Larry Staudt:  Ireland's Energy Future

Podcast Transcript Powerpoint

No comments

Post comment

 

Post a Comment

Name
Message
If you register as a user, you will be able to post comments without this CAPTCHA.
Type text into the box
 

About this Event

04 Nov 2008

 Ireland's Energy Future

About the Speech:

Larry Staudt, Director of Centre for Renewable Energy at Dundalk IT, outlined Scenarios for Ireland's Energy Future and concluded that the only sustainable future is in Renewables. He challenged policy-makers and business leaders to face up to this reality and make the necessary Capital Investment now while Energy is still relatively cheap.

About the Speaker:

Larry Staudt has been involved with renewable energy since 1978. He was engineering manager of Enertech Corporation in the USA in the early 1980s, during which time Enertech designed and installed close to 2000 wind turbines, both large and small, and fifty solar hot water heating systems.

He designed and constructed two solar homes. He was a founder member and chief executive of the Irish Wind Energy Association, and a vice president of the European Wind Energy Association. He is lecturer at Dundalk Institute of Technology, teaching and supervising theses in their MSc in Renewable Energy Systems.

Mr Staudt's presentation is available here.

 

\"\"
Larry Staudt with IIEA Director General, Jill Donoghue.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Views: 1464

Video URL:
Embed Code:

Other Related

Associated Documents

  • No associated documents

Associated Publications

Annual Report 2011

Annual Report 2011

Why Legislate? Designing a Climate Law for Ireland

Thinking Deeper: Financing Options for Home Retrofit

What Can Cancún Deliver? - A Pre-Summit Briefing

The Copenhagen Conference: How Should the EU Respond?

Jobs, Growth and Reduced Energy Costs: Greenprint for a National Energy Efficiency Retrofit Programme

The Climate Change Challenge: Strategic Issues, Options and Implications for Ireland