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EPP Project Courses

     Project Courses are interdisciplinary problem-solving projects in which students work as leaders or members of project teams. Problem areas are abstracted from local, state, and national situations and involve the interaction of technology and public policy, with different projects being chosen each semester. Oral and written presentations concerning the results of project studies are prepared.

    Fall 2000
     The project "Hydrogen-based Energy System: The next ten years" focused on the potential to implement hydrogen technologies in specific applications as critical steps toward a hydrogen energy economy. Seven applications were evaluated on a set of objective criteria that included cost, technical performance, environmental impacts, fuel-delivery requirements, development and deployment tissues, and technology diffusion processes. The most promising application identified on the basis of these criteria was the use of direct methanol fuel cells in small electronic devices such as cellular phones. The results of this analysis are inconsistent with current research and development investment patterns, suggesting that alternative research programs could result in a more efficient transition to hydrogen technologies. Faculty members included Mike DeKay (Heinz/EPP) and Hadi Dowlatabadi (EPP). Managers were James Rhodes (EPP doctoral student) and Kate Figiel (Heinz Master's student).

     The second project was titled "Environmental Impacts of E-commerce - A case study of book purchasing." The internet has changed the way that many people shop, with books being one of the first products sold significantly in this way. The project examined the environmental impacts of e-com-merce through its effects on such activities as driving to stores, managing inventory, packaging purchases, and shipping books. One important determinant of the net effects is the proportion of books shipped by air, which imposes large environmental burdens. Faculty members were Baruch Fischhoff (SDS/EPP) and Ed Rubin (MechE/EPP). Managers were EPP doctoral students SHUI Bin and Li-Chiou Chen.

    Spring 2001
     "Voting System Transitions: What are the options for Pennsylvania" was the project for Spring. The last presidential election exposed many fundamental problems on the how votes are cast in Pennsylvania and explored economic, political, reliability, and fairness issues associated with different voting techniques. The project's advisory panel consisted of voting officials from the eight surrounding counties. The report highlighted the difficult trade-offs that must be made with the adoption of any standardized statewide voting technology; there is no simple solution. Faculty were Paul Fischbeck (SDS/EPP), Fran McMichael (CEE/EPP) and Spyros Pandis (ChemE/EPP). Managers were Jason Katcoff (ChemE/EPP BS 2001 and 5th-Year Master) and EPP doctoral students Anand Rao and Tair-Rong Sheu.

    Fall 2001
     The project "We Know Where You Are: A study of location tracking" was one of two projects for Fall 2001. The project focused on location tracking technologies for enhanced 911 and their impacts on the privacy of cellular

EPP Projects - continued right column

 

University Buys a Stake in Wind

    Carnegie Mellon recently became the nation's largest single retail purchaser of wind-generated electric power when it arranged to meet 5% of its total electric power needs with power purchased from the Excelon-Community Energy Wind Farm at Mill Run in Springfield and Steward townships in Fayette County, about 40 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. In announcing the contract, Carnegie Mellon's President Jared Cohon explained that "developing new technologies, policies and practices to protect and enhance our global environment is one of our strategic priorities." In addition to research and education focused on sustainability, Dr. Cohon explained that the University is committed to "using our campus practices to improve environmental quality, to provide leadership environmentally sustainable practices."

Yeh - continued from pg. 6

expected risk of PM related premature mortality and the control costs of emission reductions. Cost and threshold contribute the most important source of uncertainty to the estimates of the costs per percent annual premature mortality risk reduction associated with exposure to ambient PM2.5 concentrations.

     Future research is needed to identify the biological existence/mechanism of a threshold for the sensitive popula-tion(s) at risk. Alternatively, if the uncertainty exists, research is needed to determinate criterion for "drawing lines" to determine where the NAAQS PM standard should be set.

    Work supported by NSF grant SBR-9521914, the H. John Heinz III Professorship of Environmental Engineering, and Carnegie Mellon University.

Taylor - continued from pg. 5

improvements and cost reductions occurred in a quantifiable fashion as the technology became more widely adopted.

    Work supported by the National Science Foundation (SBR-9521914) through the Center for Integrated Study of the Human Dimensions of Global Change, and from Carnegie Mellon University.

EPP Projects - continued from left column

consumers. The class focused on the actual implementation of the technologies, using this information for commercial purposes and governmental use of this information.

    Faculty were Henry Piehler (MSE/BHE/EPP) and Marvin Sirbu (EPP/ECE/GSIA). Managers were EPP undergraduate students Lynna Quandt (ECE/EPP undergrad and 5th-year Master) and James Wade (MechE/EPP undergrad).

     "From Carnegie Mellon to Kyoto: How far can we go?" was the second project. The Kyoto Protocol calls for reducing absolute emissions of greenhouse gases, below a baseline level from the early 1990s. Although the U.S. is not currently a signator to the agreement, firms and institutions are free to seek their own reductions. Focusing on CO2 emissions, the project determined that the University could do a lot, with some of the most cost-effective steps arising from an audit of the "little" ways in which energy is used. Faculty were Baruch Fischhoff (SDS/EPP) and Ed Rubin (MechE/EPP). Student managers were Andrew Bayowski (MSE/EPP undergrad) and Carly Jerla (CEE/EPP undergrad).

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