Kevin

Kevin

Kevin Anderson is professor of energy and climate change in the School of Mechanical, Aeronautical and Civil Engineering at the University of Manchester. He is deputy director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and is research active with recent publications in Royal Society journals and Nature. He engages widely across all tiers of government; from reporting on aviation-related emission to the EU Parliament, advising the Prime Minister’s office on Carbon Trading and having contributed to the development of the UK’s Climate Change Act. With his colleague Alice Bows, Kevin’s work on carbon budgets has been pivotal in revealing the widening gulf between political rhetoric on climate change and the reality of rapidly escalating emissions. His work makes clear that there is now little chance of maintaining the rise in global temperature at below 2°C, despite repeated high-level statements to the contrary. Moreover, Kevin’s research demonstrates how avoiding even a 4°C rise demands a radical reframing of both the climate change agenda and the economic characterisation of contemporary society. Kevin has a decade’s industrial experience, principally in the petrochemical industry. He sits as commissioner on the Welsh Government’s climate change commission and is a director of Greenstone Carbon Management. Kevin is a chartered mechanical engineer and a fellow of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers.

Living in a Carbon Budget

July 2006 Living in a Carbon Budget This report, by Bows, Anderson and other Tyndall Manchester researchers, was the first to develop energy scenarios based on carbon budgets and including international emissions from aviation and shipping. The research was commissioned by…

Energy’s Low Hanging Fruit

Jan 2006  Energy’s Low Hanging Fruit – BBC viewpoint Anderson argues that the Government’s energy review and shift of emphasis towards nuclear was set in stone at the time of Energy White Paper – with the latter’s enthusiastic but rhetorical support for energy efficiency (&…

Could Do Better

April 2003  Could Do Better – Power Engineer “The sentiment of the Governments white paper are admirable, but it is thin on specifics.” Without substantive policies on efficiency and conservation “it will be difficult to counter calls for an expansion of nuclear power and…