Environment Energy

oil rig worker
A study of oil rigs shows that a different approach to male-dominated environments can change corporate culture.
Research on derivatives concludes they can add to a company’s leverage and market value.
workers installing a solar panel
Sunrun's Ed Fenster discusses his business and the economics of solar power.
Slate.com -
11.29.12
Jeff Ball, a Stanford scholar-in-residence, explores why U.S. entrepreneurs are looking to China for coal-burning technology.
Stanford Law School -
11.14.12
The Brookings Institution and Stanford’s Steyer-Taylor Center outline reforms to cut the cost of clean energy finance.
Guys on a moped with birds overhead
A Stanford GSB student looks at the value of renewable energy in the developing world.
Brenden Millstein
How Brenden Millstein's Carbon Lighthouse helps businesses conserve more energy.
Stanford Program on Regions of Innovation and Entrepreneurship -
08.10.12
Gathering at the Stanford GSB, scholars and industry leaders discuss the future of the green city.
Tainan, Taiwan, sunset
A key player in creating Taiwan's semiconductor industry explains the role of technology in improving energy efficiency.
China Shale Gas Line
Former U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry joins the head of the U.S-China Energy Forum to explain why shale gas “has the potential to change everything.”

Pages

oil rig worker
A study of oil rigs shows that a different approach to male-dominated environments can change corporate culture.
workers installing a solar panel
Sunrun's Ed Fenster discusses his business and the economics of solar power.
Guys on a moped with birds overhead
A Stanford GSB student looks at the value of renewable energy in the developing world.
Brenden Millstein
How Brenden Millstein's Carbon Lighthouse helps businesses conserve more energy.
Tainan, Taiwan, sunset
A key player in creating Taiwan's semiconductor industry explains the role of technology in improving energy efficiency.
China Shale Gas Line
Former U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry joins the head of the U.S-China Energy Forum to explain why shale gas “has the potential to change everything.”
photo of lab tech making solar panel
A conversation with Stefan Reichelstein on the economics of solar power.
photo of solar panel installer
Jeffrey Ball, at the Steyer-Taylor Center for Energy Policy and Finance, says it’s time for the world’s approach to renewables to “grow up.”
Tony Blair photo
Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair discusses the importance of partnerships in working with African nations.
Kenji Tateiwa photo
Tokyo Electric’s manager of nuclear power cites the value of cross-border sharing of crisis management knowledge. 

Pages

Research on derivatives concludes they can add to a company’s leverage and market value.
Stanford experts have concluded that in the event of a nuclear detonation, people in large metropolitan areas are better off sheltering-in-place in basements for 12-24 hours than trying to evacuate immediately, unless a lengthy warning period is provided.
Consumer and environmental groups, angry over the spreading oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, are calling for a boycott of BP, the oil giant that owns the well gushing oil onto beaches and marshes. According to research by Phillip Leslie and Larry Chavis, boycotts do in fact work and they're something businesses should be concerned about.
The United States will see a slow move toward electric car adoption in the next 5-to-10 years while China will see only a small market for cars but big opportunities to manufacture and export batteries. A Stanford MBA student class study doubts either nation will move quickly to adopt clean coal technology.
The financial impact of regulating coal-fired power plants that produce carbon dioxide emissions under a cap-and-trade system will be much less than previously projected according to research by Professor Stefan Reichelstein and doctoral student Ozge Islegen.