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The Energy Institute (EI) is a professional organization for engineers and other professionals in energy-related fields. The EI was formed in 2003 by the merger of the Institute of Petroleum (dating back to 1913) and the Institute of Energy (dating back to 1925). It has an international membership of about 20,000 people and 200 companies.
The Institute's CEO and founder, Robert L. Bradley Jr., is a senior fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research and Energy & Climate Change Fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs in London. He has written eight books, including Energy: The Master Resource; Climate Alarmism Reconsidered; and Edison to Enron. [11]
The Institute of Energy Conversion (IEC), located at the University of Delaware is the oldest solar energy research institute in the world. [1] It was established by Karl Boer in 1972 to pioneer research on thin film solar cells. [2]
He received the Julian L. Simon Memorial Award in 2002 for his work on free market approaches to energy sustainability. [11] He is the author of eight books on energy history and policy, including The Mirage of Oil Protection (1989); Oil, Gas, and Government: The U.S. Experience (2 vols.: 1996).
Earthwatch Institute, Boston, Massachusetts; Energy and Environmental Research Center (EERC), North Dakota; Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI), Washington, DC; Florida Environmental Research Institute (FERI) Florida Institute of Oceanography (FIO) Global Energy Network Institute (GENI), California
The proposed Mitsubishi plant is “the wrong project, at the wrong place and time, with the wrong financial scenario,” said the report from the Institute of Energy Economics and Financial ...
The Institute for Energy and Environmental Research (IEER) is an anti-nuclear [1] [2] organization which focuses on the environmental safety of nuclear weapons production, ozone layer depletion, and other issues relating to energy. [3]
Institute for Energy Technology (IFE) was established in 1948 as the Institute for Nuclear Energy (IFA). The name was changed in 1980. Its main office is at Kjeller, Norway, and slightly under half of the institute’s activities are based in Halden. In Halden IFE is host to the international OECD Halden Reactor Project, with 18 member states.