STEP Seminar: Geopolitics of the Energy Transition with Prof. Daniel Scholten

Center for Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy
November 13, 2023 - 11:30 am CST
- 12:30 pm
Josie Johnson Room 180, Humphrey School of Public Affairs

The energy transition is fundamentally changing energy geopolitics. Renewable energy and other decarbonization options are reshaping energy systems, markets, and trade flows, offering new opportunities and challenges for energy security and industrial strategies of countries. How will this affect relations between them? Will electrification and hydrogen, critical materials, and decentral generation pacify global energy politics or bring a perilous transition?


Join us for a lunchtime seminar with Daniel Scholten, Visiting Professor of Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy. STEP Seminars are free and open to everyone. Light lunch will be provided for registrants. RSVP at this link: https://z.umn.edu/Nov13STEPSeminarRSVP



 

About the Speaker: 

Portrait of Daniel Scholten Daniel Scholten, PhD, is a visiting assistant professor in the science, technology, and environmental policy area at the Humphrey School of Public Affairs. He is also a research associate at Clingendael’s EU & Global Affairs Unit, the Netherlands, and guest lecturer at the University of Stavanger, Norway.

Dr. Scholten specializes in the geopolitics of the energy transition with a broader interest in the governance of sustainability. He aims to contribute to a smooth energy transition, both domestically and globally, through fundamental and actionable knowledge. His current research activities include the editorship of an Edward Elgar handbook on the geopolitics of the energy transition, developing a theory of energy geopolitics, and investigating practical governance solutions for sustainability transformations.

Scholten is teaching climate change policy and economics of environmental policy, and is developing a course and online simulation game on the geopolitics and governance of the energy transition.

Previously, he was senior strategic advisor for energy and sustainability at the Netherlands Authority for Consumers and Markets (and energy regulator), assistant professor at Delft University of Technology, member of the expert panel of the IRENA global commission on the geopolitics of energy transformation, and non-resident fellow at the Payne Institute, Colorado School of Mines.

His educational background combines degrees in political science and international and European relations with a PhD on the economic organization of future energy systems.

Contact Info
Questions? Contact [email protected].