February 9, 2012

U-I hosts faculty from other colleges in summer program

Plenty of Iowa students are in summer school right now but you don’t usually hear about professors doing so. The University of Iowa is hosting faculty members from seven other Iowa colleges this summer as part of a new program called FUTURE. Madeline Shea, directs the FUTURE project and is a U-I professor of biochemistry.

"FUTURE stands for Fostering Undergraduate Talent Uniting Research and Education," Shea says. "Our goal is to develop closer collaborations with our academic colleagues throughout the state, particularly those at primarily undergraduate institutions."

She says the initiative aims to build a network of scientists and science educators in Iowa while strengthening biomedical research in the state. Shea says the seven visiting faculty members are nearing the end of their two-month stays in Iowa City through the FUTURE program.

"As far as I know, at least in the College of Medicine, this is the first project of its kind," Shea says. "We’ve certainly had people come and do a sabbatical with us. I’ve had faculty from other universities come and do that during the academic year but this is like a mini-sabbatical of two very solid months of research and learning about our programs here, getting to use our core research facilities, using instrumentation that might not be on their own campus."

Of the seven faculty members, five brought along undergrads from their colleges to take part in the extensive bio-med research projects. FUTURE aims to inspire undergrads at every college in Iowa, Shea says, to consider biomedical research careers. She’d like to see students and faculty from every Iowa college taking part in the effort.

Shea says, "Many students don’t know what’s available to them and they don’t realize that right here in the state of Iowa are excellent opportunities to do things, to literally save mankind and to reduce our health care costs in the future and to bring better health care to the citizens of Iowa."

Participants in FUTURE this summer are from: Northwestern College in Orange City, Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Luther College in Decorah, Drake University in Des Moines, St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Graceland University in Lamoni and Loras College in Dubuque.

 

Coal advocate talks bout energy situation

An advocate for the coal industry who was supposed to be in Des Moines Thursday didn’t make it after trouble getting his flight.  Joe Lucas, the senior vice president for communications for "American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity ," talked with Radio Iowa via phone.

Lucas says the key thing they are focusing on now as the U.S. Senate begins working on the climate change bill is constructing a policy to reduce emissions while continuing to "protect access to affordable reliable" energy and increase energy independence. Lucas says Iowa is a target because 76% of the state’s electricity is generated by coal.

Lucas says environmental concerns are a part of the bigger equation. He uses his problem in getting a flight to Des Moines as an example. "I don’t think any of us would want to see our electricity system be as unreliable as our airlines are today," Lucas says. He says the issue is about cost, energy security, reliability and the environment, and finding a solution that takes into account all four factors is harder than people think.

Iowa has increased the amount of electricity the state generates from wind power, and Lucas says those who support coal think that’s good. Lucas says: "One of the things that upsets me is when people try to act as if energy resources are competitors, they’re not. In many cases they are complimentary of each other." Lucas says each energy source has a place in the equation.

He says wind power is used to meet peaking demand because it is wind is an intermittent power source that only produces when the wind blows. Lucas says coal is a "baseload" energy that is always there, so the idea that coal could be replaced by wind doesn’t match with the way we use energy. He says we need wind, coal and other sources of energy.

Lucas says we need to move forward and continue to use technology to make coal burn cleaner, and says improvements have already been made. Lucas says Iowans should stay in touch with lawmakers as the climate change bill moves forward.

Rants, Culver quarrel over "Power Fund"

A Republican gubernatorial candidate is taking aim at one of Democratic Governor Chet Culver’s priority programs. Republican candidate Chris Rants of Sioux City says it’s time to shut down the "Iowa Power Fund" which has given state grants to renewable energy projects.

"I think the Power Fund is not the best use of our money," Rants says. "At a time when we have a billion dollar budget deficit…I think that’s one of the first places the legislature ought to look at cutting to try to come up with the money to balance our budget."

Rants and Culver disagree on the Power Fund’s impact. Rants says the Iowa Power Fund hasn’t created as many of the so-called "green jobs" Culver has been touting.

"We just got results back on how many jobs have actually been created and to date it’s only 100 jobs for a $50 million investment," Rants says. "I’m not sure that most Iowans think that $500,000 per job created is a good return on the money that’s being spent."

Culver is in Alaska this weekend, citing a report which shows there are five-thousand more people employed in Iowa’s "green industries" today than there were five years ago. Culver is giving the keynote address at today’s Renewable Energy Fair in Anchorage.

"I would hope that while Governor Culver is out in Alaska promoting his ‘green jobs’ fund that he actually tells Alaskans — and he should tell Iowans — how much money we’re spending per job," Rants says.

But a spokesman for Culver says Rants "has his facts wrong" and is citing an out-dated report. About $47.5 million in Power Fund money has been spent to date, but $7.5 million of that was used last fall to help flood victims according to the governor’s deputy chief of staff. About $35 million in Power Fund money has been awarded to renewable energy projects, and the governor’s staff says the grants helped fund construction jobs in addition to on-going employment in places like wind turbine production lines.

Finally, $5 million of "Power Fund" money has been sent to Iowa’s community colleges to finance programs that train workers in the renewable energy field.