CIERP Alumni Perspectives: A Conversation with Kartikeya Singh

In 2021, COP26 seized the attention of much of the world. But it was at another COP over a decade prior – COP16, in Cancun, Mexico – where Dr Kartikeya Singh’s interest in applying to the PhD program at the Fletcher School was encouraged. At COP16, Dr Singh met Professor Kelly Sims Gallagher at a plenary session, and had the opportunity to attend a reception that Fletcher was hosting for diplomats. Having already attended the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, Dr Singh found the interdisciplinary nature of Fletcher to be the ideal place for him to enhance and deepen his existing background, by exploring environment and climate-related issues through different lenses.

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Climate Policy Lab
CIERP Alumni Perspectives: A Conversation with Mathew Lee

It was at a field trip, organized as part of an environmental science class during his senior year of high school when Mathew first noticed what the systemic threat of climate change was going to be. Mathew credits his teacher, Mr Ross Olson, for arranging field trips which helped bring abstract textbook concepts to life and made him ‘see’ how climate change was beginning to impact his life and the community he lived in. He quickly realized that climate change was not going to just be a problem for the scientists to solve. This made him consider keeping climate-related careers in mind along with his aptitude for the social sciences.

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Climate Policy Lab
Moving to net-zero targets is a matter of security: COP26 President Alok Sharma speaks at The Fletcher School

On April 23, 2022, COP26 President and UK Cabinet Member Alok Sharma spoke at The Fletcher School at Tufts University, and discussed the outcomes of the Glasgow Climate Pact, the urgency to establish public-private financing partnerships for clean energy transition, and the current Russian invasion of Ukraine and the subsequent humanitarian and energy crisis.

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Climate Policy Lab
Transforming for the Earth and humanity

This blog, usually reserved for pieces on climate and energy policies, may seem ill-suited for discussions of faith and spirituality. I can’t help but notice, however, the parallels between the transformation that occurred last week in churches everywhere, and the transformation that is required of us to address climate change. We need a transformation that is rooted in love, and without it, no technical work will be sufficient to tackle climate change.

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Competitive Power Market – The Missing Piece Bridging China’s Short-Term Energy Realities and Long-term Climate Ambitions

Since China announced its ambitious plans to have CO2 emissions peak before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060, how to realize these goals has been a main focus of the world’s attention. The biggest challenge the country faces is how to navigate the energy transition away from coal-fired electricity, which accounts for roughly 60% of its total power generation and around 40% of its annual CO2 emissions.

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