Past Events
Career Insights & Exploration
Ecosystem Deep Dive: Energy & Entrepreneurship
Event detailsCareer Insights & Exploration
Join Tuck Centers and the CDO for a 3-day, immersive experience where you’ll dive deep in to the ecosystems of specific industries and learn about career options for MBAs.
For more information, please contact the Revers Center for Energy at: tuck.energy@tuck.dartmouth.edu

Dartmouth Energy Collaborative Lunch
Climbing the Learning Curve: Student Experiences with Energy Sector Internships
Tuck’s Revers Center for Energy will co-sponsor a talk by four Dartmouth College ‘20s as they discuss their experiences in energy-related internships in D.C. last summer.
Event detailsDartmouth Energy Collaborative Lunch
Tuck’s Revers Center for Energy will co-sponsor a talk by four Dartmouth College ‘20s as they discuss their experiences in energy-related internships in D.C. last summer. The four panelists will discuss expectations, surprises, and lessons learned from their 10-week internships in energy policy. Please contact Kristin Miller at Kristin.j.miller@Dartmouth.edu with questions.
Trek to MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory
Tuck’s Revers Center for Energy will host a trek to the MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory.
Event detailsTrek to MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory
Tuck’s Revers Center for Energy will host a trek to the MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory. This visit will complement the Nuclear 101 workshop taking place on May 8th. This tour which will include a 1 hour presentation and a 1 hour tour.
Nuclear 101
The Revers Center for Energy will be hosting its inaugural Nuclear 101 Event. Come out to hear your classmate Ryan Nielsen, Vedrana Greatorex, Ryan Turk, and Danielle Castley (Thayer) discuss the nuclear power industry and their experiences working in it. Pizza will be provided.
Event detailsNuclear 101
The Revers Center for Energy will be hosting its inaugural Nuclear 101 Event. Come out to hear your classmate Ryan Nielsen, Vedrana Greatorex, Ryan Turk, and Danielle Castley (Thayer) discuss the nuclear power industry and their experiences working in it. Pizza will be provided.
Industry Workshop: Principles of Power Purchase Agreements
The Revers Center for Energy will host an intensive workshop covering Power Purchase Agreements in the electricity marketplace
Event detailsIndustry Workshop: Principles of Power Purchase Agreements
The Revers Center for Energy will host an intensive workshop covering Power Purchase Agreements in the electricity marketplace
Energy, Disaster & Resilience Panel Discussion
Public Talk by energy system experts Amro Farid, Alexandra Klass, and Anthony Giacomoni to discuss the emerging climate, weather, geopolitical, cyber, and other challenges facing the energy system and how institutions, technologies, and markets are shifting to respond.
Event detailsEnergy, Disaster & Resilience Panel Discussion
12:15 – 1:30 p.m
Haldeman 041
Join energy system experts Amro Farid, Alexandra Klass, and Anthony Giacomoni to discuss the emerging climate, weather, geopolitical, cyber, and other challenges facing the energy system and how institutions, technologies, and markets are shifting to respond.
Co-hosted by the Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society, the Revers Center for Energy at Tuck Business School, the Dickey Center for International Understanding, and Thayer School of Engineering
Multi-Level Architectures of Energy Resilience
Public Talk by Lorenzo Kristov, Principal, Market and Infrastructure Policy at the California Independent System Operator (CAISO)
Event detailsMulti-Level Architectures of Energy Resilience
Public Talk by Lorenzo Kristov
4:30pm – 6:00pm
Kemeny Hall 008
Resilience has become a central theme in the public discourse. But what do we mean by resilience, how are energy systems involved, and what does it mean for societies? What kinds of resilience are needed to adapt to ecosystem disruption, extreme weather events, cyber and geopolitical threats? What kinds of disruptions are shaping energy systems? What strategies can be used to develop resilience in our technologies, institutions, and societies? And what is the role of energy – electricity in particular – in resilience? Resilience of complex systems – whether technology-based systems like electric power, or human social and urban systems, or natural ecosystems – spans multiple layers and integrates multiple functions. In this talk Kristov will explore how, by mapping our energy systems and their roles in other parts of the social system, we can see potential resilience-building strategies.

Jones Seminars on Science, Technology, and Society
The Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society and the Dartmouth Energy Collaborative: Building foundations for shaping energy systems
Event detailsJones Seminars on Science, Technology, and Society
The Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society and the Dartmouth Energy Collaborative: Building foundations for shaping energy systems
3:30 pm
Spanos Auditorium, Cummings Hall
Dr. Elizabeth Wilson
Professor of Environmental Studies and Director of the Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society
ABSTRACT: Energy use has transformed modern society and new risks, demands, and innovations are driving system changes across multiple contexts. Climate and weather risks affect resources and infrastructure, distributed energy resources and microgrids provide opportunities for local energy production and resilience, geopolitical and cyber security challenges highlight interconnected system vulnerabilities, new markets and business models shape system value, and legacy regulatory and institutional structures embed past logics in future development trajectories. Identifying new opportunities and risks requires deep interdisciplinary knowledge which spans technical, economic, legal, historical and cultural environments. Creating an energy and society institute which focuses on contexts for energy system transformation and problems shaping trajectories future systems provides opportunities for cross-campus collaborations and engagement with local, national and international practitioners while challenging traditional disciplinary boundaries. Please come and share your thoughts on how best to do this at Dartmouth.

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