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Students Present their Final Workshop Briefings for the Spring
Semester
On Wednesday, April 23, the Master of Public Administration in
Environmental Science and Policy program marked the end of the final semester
with a presentation of students' Final Briefings for the Workshop in Applied
Earth Systems Policy Analysis. In the spring workshops, ESP students work with
clients to address needs or challenges in various areas of environmental
policy.
The final workshop briefings provide students the opportunity to
share with their cohort the details of their workshop projects, as well as some
of the challenges they have faced and the solutions they found to manage them.
Further, the briefings provide professional training by serving as simulations
of presentations that students can expect to give during their careers in
environmental policy. This semester's clients were the United Nations World
Food Programme, U.S. EPA Region II, the Mid-Atlantic Coastal Ocean Observing
Regional Association, Sustainable South Bronx and its Green-for-All Project,
and the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection.
"The purpose of the spring-semester workshop is threefold,"
said Steve Cohen, Director of the MPA-ESP program, in his opening remarks. "To
share understanding of how each group is approaching their projects and the
methodologies being used; to discuss the practical problems associated with
conducting policy analysis in an action environment with a client; and to
explain how they have framed the problems addressed and to cut them down to a
manageable size."
The workshop teams were advised by Professors Kathleen Callahan,
Steve Cohen, Tanya Heikkila, Gail Suchman, and Sara Tjossem. Professor Cohen,
Director of the MPA-ESP program as well as Executive Director and Chief
Operating Officer of the Earth Institute, advised that team that worked with
the Environmental Protection Agency to develop environmental sustainability
plans for municipalities in Region II. The team has conducted initial
research on municipalities that have developed sustainability plans and a needs
assessment of towns without plans, and has synthesized research to develop a
practical handbook for sustainability that will be presented to the EPA and
distributed nationally to municipalities.
Professor Heikkila, a SIPA professor who was recently awarded a
three-year grant by the National Science Foundation to study interstate river
basin compacts in the Western United States, worked with the team that dealt
with integrating the Ocean Observing System into Coastal Zone Management
in the Mid-Atlantic. The Integrated Ocean Observing System aims to make
climate predictions, promote maritime safety, minimize public health risks, and
support ecological and resource management decision-making. Columbia's team has been working with the Mid-Atlantic Regional Coastal Ocean Observing
Regional Association to incorporate this system into the New York bight.
The team working with Sustainable South Bronx has been working
on the Green Collar Jobs project to develop a model for a retrofit training
program. Professor Suchman, lecturer at SIPA and Columbia Law School, and Senior Legal Advisor to the Urban Design Lab for Sustainable Development at Columbia's Earth Institute, is advising the team. The team has designed a retrofit
training program to promote energy conservation, provide employment, educate
workers, and encourage outside investment.
Professor Callahan, the EPA Deputy Regional Administrator of
Region 2, advised the workshop team covering the UN World Food Programme (WFP)
and Climate Change in West Africa. The WFP is the world's largest food
aid organization, serving 88 million people in 78 countries each year.
However, climate change has exacerbated the problems of rain-dependent
agriculture through flooding, drought, pests, disease, and environmental
degradation. The Columbia team is creating strategies for incorporating
climate change adaptation into WFP projects. They have created a
framework for climate change assessment, which looks at the impact sof drought
and desertification, flooding, and deforestation.
The final team is working with the New Jersey Department of
Environmental Protection to Professor Tjossem, Lecturer and Associate Director
of Curriculum for MPA-ESP program, worked with the team evaluating biomass life
cycle emissions calculation methods for use by electricity-generating
facilities. The NJ DEP aims to recommend a course of action by
considering options and policies, but needs more information about renewable
fuels. The Columbia team is analyzing the variety of feedstocks to
consider for generating electricity in New Jersey. They have been
constructing models and assessing current policies, and will present a report
to the NJ DEP.
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