未来能源研究所-钢铁和铝工业在产品层面的温室气体排放强度(英)
Greenhouse Gas Emissions Intensities of the Steel and Aluminum Industries at the Product Level Brian P. Flannery and Jan W. Mares Report 24-13 August 2024 Resources for the Future i About the Authors Brian P. Flannery is a visiting fellow at Resources for the Future (RFF). Dr. Flannery joined RFF in 2012 where he continues involvement in climate and energy issues that began when he joined Exxon’s Corporate Research in 1980. He retired from Exxon Mobil Corporation in 2011 as Science, Strategy, and Programs Manager. At Exxon, he conducted and supported climate research, and organized international meetings on climate-related science, technology, economics, and policy. As an observer for industry and continuing at RFF, he followed and reported on IPCC assessments and negotiations under the UN Framework Convention. At Exxon, Flannery played a leadership role in creating the Joint Program on the Science and Policy of Global Change (MIT) and the Global Climate and Energy Project (Stanford). Flannery has served on numerous editorial and advisory boards, among them Stanford University School of Engineering and Annual Reviews of Energy and Environment and participated in assessments by the US DOE (climate modeling and scenarios), EPA (climate impacts), and IPCC Working Group III. He served with business associations including the International Chamber of Commerce (Vice-Chair, Environment and Energy Commission), US Council for International Business (Chair, International Energy Working Group), and Major Economies Business Forum (Chair, Task Force on Business Engagement). Before Exxon, Flannery pursued a career in astrophysics with degrees from Princeton (1970) and UC Santa Cruz (PhD 1974) and as a post-doctoral associate at the Institute for Advanced Study and assistant and associate professor at Harvard. Flannery is coauthor of the reference book Numerical Recipes: The Art of Scientific Computing. Jan W. Mares is a senior advisor at Resources for the Future, where he has been involved with work on energy and environmental issues since 2009. From 2003 to 2009, he was Deputy Director of the Private Sector Office of the Department of Homeland Security. During the Reagan Administration, Mares was an Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Import Administration for about a year, a Senior Policy Analyst at the White House, and for four years was three different Assistant Secretaries of Energy including for Fossil Energy. Before entering federal service, Mares was with Union Carbide Corporation for about 18 years. About nine years of that tenure were in the law department, where he worked on antitrust compliance and purchasing issues, as well as spending seven years on issues involving Union Carbide’s overseas activities, and he became the International Counsel. The other nine years involved business responsibilities in the chemicals area. They included leading an effort for three years to create a chemicals joint venture with a Middle Eastern government company
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