|
|
|
|

LAB on Old and New
ENERGY
An immersed experience of a Do-Tank
April 17 & 18, 2007
Location:
Hotel
Ciutat de Girona, Spain
Max. 20 Delegates
Moderated by
Humberto Schwab,
Director, Club of Amsterdam, Innovation
Philosopher
With the Thought Leaders
Nathalie
Horbach, Centre for Energy, Petroleum
and Mineral Law and Policy, University of Dundee
Simon
Taylor, Director
and Co-Founder,
Global Witness
Christof
van Agt
Paul Holister,
Nanotechnology & Energy
..
Girona
|
..
|
 |
LAB
on Old and New ENERGY
Change agents will brainstorm on concrete tangible models to embody
all the things we already know in a perspective of person-to-person
acting.
The "old and new energy" lab will, by sharing high-qualified knowledge
and experience, innovate the way we think, act and feel regarding energy.
We have to change above all our way of experiencing energy. We need
change agents to deconstruct concepts and construct new ones.
Moderated
by
Humberto
Schwab, Director, Club of Amsterdam,
Innovation
Philosopher
and the Thought
Leaders
Nathalie
Horbach, Centre for Energy, Petroleum
and Mineral Law and Policy, University of Dundee
...
Nuclear energy provides for a credible alternative source of electricity.
It does not emit CO2 although, similar to renewable
energy sources, emissions are not entirely zero. Due to the need to
mitigate recognized risks, nuclear energy has the most secured and
innovative energy fuel cycle, in respect of both strict international
and national safety and liability regulation (polluter-pays), including
internalization of such costs in the electricity price.
...
Simon
Taylor, Director
and Co-Founder,
Global Witness
...
The output needs to be nothing short of a global revolution around
the way in which we generate and utilize energy and its subsequent
equitable availability. Nothing less will suffice. Whilst this might
sound dismissive, nuclear power would seem to be an unnecessary distraction
which does nothing to address either our overall energy requirements,
or the overall use of carbon intensive energy sources - and that is
before we consider the implications of the complete lack of adequate
waste management, the propensity for increased nuclear use to create
its own security of supply problem, the appalling overall record of
the industry when it comes to onsite safety and maintenance, and the
increased risks of nuclear proliferation and the potential for terrorism.
...
Christof
van Agt
Paul
Holister, Nanotechnology & Energy
...
Nanotechnology operates at such a fundamental level that there is
very little of a technological nature that it will not impact. Thus
its effects on energy generation, transmission, storage and consumption
are numerous and diverse. Some will be incremental and some quite
possibly revolutionary ...
We
start from the principle "knowledge is not in your head, it is in dialogue".
Knowledge is information combined with experience, context, interpretation
and reflection.
The two-day lab sessions are aiming in constructing a language of transformation
as a bridge to new do-perspectives. The aim is to reach synchronized
action plans in diverse spaces, to enhance a pragmatic framework for
acting.
The discourse on energy will include all the levels of the energy chain
and the innovation of this energy chain. We will of course consider
all aspects of the old and new chain: sources, transportation, distribution,
grids, selling and buying, consumption and regulations. We will look
at innovations like bio-fuel, new coal, safe nuclear energies, hybrid
solutions, intelligent grids, intelligent buying and selling, intelligent
consumption, certificated standards and care for the environment. Most
of all we will aim at innovation of our way of talking and thinking
about old and new energy.
The focus is how to share our experience in interpretation of our information,
in creating the context and in reflecting on these matters.
The lab will have the structure of a do-tank:
|
- Analyse the actual situation
with different approaches.
- Share best experiences
in hybrid, deconstructive approaches.
- Design new concept models
(rapid prototyping).
- Reflect and refine.
- Make a what-to-do plan
(road map).
|
Using the following tools:
Value and appreciative
inquiry
To establish the basic personal values, those are tangible in this matter?
To discover and share our best experiences in deconstructing this theme.
Socratic discourse
To establish the basic questions and analysis: Is the way we have put
this theme till now the right one? Is economy the adequate framework
for energy? Etc.
Brainstorm methods
Work on new concepts, frameworks and hybrid approaches. With Future
Scenario methods and other reflective tools.
Who should attend
Experts in hybrid fields related to energy.
People of all sectors (consultancy, academia, education, SME's etc.)
that have hybrid knowledge on energy or/and want to foster concrete
action.
Persons who have birds eye view on the bridges between energy and other
domains.
Persons who have a drive to change the "energy discourse" .
Why
In the future
new concepts will mark these fields.
Specialists often remain in their domains and seldom participate in
fundamental brainstorm with experts from other domains.
The concept of energy is fundamentally related with values in our daily
life. Cross over dialogue can create a new framework of meaning to facilitate
effective actions on different levels, in our daily life.
Benefits
You will take home some hybrid approaches of your key topics, you will
have experienced the force of Socratic dialogue and you will have a
personal action plan.
|
|
|
 |
April 17, 2007
09:00 - 9:30
Registration
09:30
- 13:00
Part I
13:00-15:00
Lunch
15:00-19:00
Part II
April 18, 2007
9:30
- 13:00
Part III
13:00-15:00
Lunch
15:00-17:00
Part IV
|
|
|
 |
As a non-for-profit foundation we don't charge
VAT.
Your Registration Includes
....LAB
participation for 2 days,.2
lunches, coffee and drinks during the LAB
Early Bird Registration
....till
March 9th, 2007
....€
800,-
Registration Fee
....Regular:
€ 1.300,-
....Discount:
€ 980,- [see online registration]
....Academia/Others:
€ 300,-
How to register?
...Please
use our
Online
Energy LAB Registration at
...http://www.clubofamsterdam.com/contentevents/lab_registration_001energy.htm
...or
download the
Energy
LAB Registration
Conference Hotel
Hotel
Ciutat de Girona, Spain
|
|
|

|
..
Conference Hotel
The hotel Ciutat de Girona lies in
the most emblematic cultural and historical area, in the centre of the
city. The hotel combines a modern style with pictures of the most representative
places of Girona.
Hotel
Ciutat de Girona
C/ Nord, 2
17001 Girona - Spain
Tel.: +34 972 48 30 38
Fax: +34 972 48 30 26
www.hotel-ciutatdegirona.com
Hotel Booking
Please mention the Club
of Amsterdam in order to get the special rates.
The special rate is only available
till March 15th!
You can call, mail, fax or send an email to:
info@hotel-ciutatdegirona.com
Special
Rates only available
till March 15th:
Double
room single occupance €
101 +7% tax
Double room €
122 +7% tax
Buffet breakfast included
Services
included in the rates
- Welcome drink
- Free internet in all
rooms
- Radio and CD Player
- Bathrobe and slippers
- Free minibar
- Coffee-tea maker in
all rooms
- Free laptop and printer
available under request
|
|
 |
By Airplane
Airport
Girona-Costa Brava
Airport
Girona-Costa Brava
website
12 km south from the city of Girona.
Airlines are
Ryanair - www.ryanair.com
Transavia - www.transavia.com
Iberia - www.iberia.es
Air Scotland - www.air-scotland.com
Air Europa - www.aireuropa.com
Monarch Airlines - www.flymonarch.com
and many more.
By Taxi from Girona Airport to Girona
A taxi
from Gerona airport to the Hotel Ciutat de Girona will take about
20 minutes and will cost approximately €
25-30.
By Bus from Girona
Airport to Girona Centre Bus Station
Operator: Barcelona Bus
(by Sagales).
For more options: see
Girona Airport
website
Barcelona Airport
Barcelona Airport
website
120 km south-west
from the city of Girona.
EasyJet - www.easyjet.com
Ryanair -
www.ryanair.com
Vueling - www.vueling.com
Air Berlin -
www.airberlin.com
Air Europa - www.aireuropa.com
and many more.
By Train from
Barcelona Airport to Girona
First take a train to
Barcelona Sants Railway Station and then change to the train Girona.
Travel time approx. 1 hour 15 minutes. Cost
about: €
140 - 150.
www.renfe.es
By Car
From the motorway AP-7, take the exit number 7 (Girona Sud). Go along
the road C-65 and take the second exit heading towards Girona Ciutat.
Go along Barcelona Road for about 3 km until you find Marques de Camps
Square. Go straight on down Ronda Ferran Puig Street and take Sequia
Street on the right. Go on down this street as far as the traffic lights
and turn left. Go on down Jaume I Avenue as far as the third traffic
lights and turn right. Go along Nord, which is a pedestrian Street.
In the middle of this street, you will find a pylon and on its left,
there is an entryphone to speak directly to the Hotel Reception. Then,
we will take the pylon down and at the end of the street, on the left
corner, you will find Ciutat de Girona Hotel.
|
..
|
 |

Nathalie
Horbach
Centre for Energy, Petroleum and Mineral Law and
Policy, University of Dundee
Dr. Nathalie Louisa Johanna Theodora Horbach teaches on the Nuclear
Law and Policy course at the CEPMLP where she is involved on a part-time
basis in this new specialisation within Energy and Natural Resources,
i.e. the Nuclear Law & Policy Programme (LLM and PhD).
Dr. Horbach obtained her
law degree from the University of Leiden, Faculty of Law, with a specialisation
in public international law, comparative law and international environmental
law and studied economics at the University of Amsterdam. She obtained
a doctorate at the University of Leiden, Faculty of Public International
Law on the topic Liability versus Responsibility under International
Law: Defending Strict State Responsibility for Transboundary Damage
(1996) and a fellowship for the international environmental law programme
at the Georgetown University Law Center, Washington D.C.(USA). Prizes
won include the 'Willoughby Prize' (1996); Van Vollenhoven' prize, best
bi-annual thesis on International Law (1992); Best oralist award of
1990 Philip C Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition. As a
Legal Consultant to the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (Paris, France),
she worked in areas of nuclear energy law, international public law
and comparative nuclear energy law, involving editing various NEA publications,
analysing national legal issues [involving radioactive waste management,
radiation protection, emergency preparedness, non-proliferation, etc.]
organising seminars and preparatory meetings of nuclear liability conventions
and working groups. From 1994 to 1997 she was employed by the International
Institute of Energy Law of the Leiden University, where she was lecturer
and research fellow, specialised in international nuclear energy law.
She participated as nuclear energy law specialist in the EU PHARE and
TACIS programmes on the European Energy Charter Treaty; as well as other
assistance projects.
She currently is member
of the Legal Advisory Task Force on Model Agreements of the Energy Charter
Secretariat (Brussels, Belgium), the OECD/NEA Contact Group on Nuclear
Liability Questions raised by Nuclear Safety Assistance Programmes,
the editorial board of the Journal for Energy and Natural Resources
Law, the International Nuclear Law Association (Secretary to INLA Working
Group II on Liability and Cover), as well as a member of the European
Nuclear Society, Netherlands Nuclear Society, Dutch Young Generation,
Young Nuclear Society, and last but not least, the Public International
Law Association 'Prof. mr B.M. Telders'.
www.cepmlp.org
|
| ..
|

Simon
Taylor
Director
and Co-Founder,
Global Witness
Global Witness exposes the
corrupt exploitation of natural resources and international trade systems,
to drive campaigns that end impunity, resource-linked conflict, and
human rights and environmental abuses.
The competition between
the old and emerging powers to secure the world's remaining oil reserves
is escalating, perhaps dangerously so. The scramble by extractive industries
to secure exploitation rights over the world's mineral wealth, whilst
at the same time resisting any kind of regulation that would enforce
good practice, threatens some of the planet's poorest populations, whilst
the world's dwindling forests, home to millions of people and reservoirs
of biodiversity, continue to face an onslaught by some of the most corrupt
regimes and companies, bent on satisfying an insatiable demand for timber
regardless of cost.
www.globalwitness.org
|
| ..
|

Christof van Agt
Since 2001 Mr. Van Agt works for the International Energy Agency at
the Office for Non-Member Countries in Paris where he is the administrator
for Countries of the Caspian Sea Region and Central Asia. He manages
IEA relations with Caspian and Central Asian States and the Agency's
permanent policy dialogue on energy market and investment climate development
with this important region.
From 1998 to 2001 Mr. Van Agt worked in the Secretariat of the Energy
Charter Conference in Brussels at the Directorate for Transit and Trade.
He co authored a report on transit for the G8 Energy Ministers Meeting
of April 1998 in Moscow and assisted in negotiations on the Energy Charter
Protocol on Transit and Model Agreements for Cross Border Pipelines
in 1999. An Inter-Governmental Model Agreement (IGA) and a Host-Government
Model Agreement (HGA) were approved by the Energy Charter Conference
Meeting of December 2003.
From 1996 to 1998 Mr. Van Agt worked for the European Commissions Directorate
General for Foreign Economic Relations and Common Security Policy on
energy related assistance projects in Central Asia and the Caucasus
including cooperation on interstate oil and gas transport networks.
Among others he assisted Turkmenistan in launching a first licensing
round of offshore acreage and Georgia in negotiations on the first independent
oil pipeline in the Caucasus from Baku to Supsa.
From 1991 to 1996 Mr. Van Agt worked for the International Institute
for Energy Law at the Faculty of Public International Law of the University
of Leiden on economic and legal reform in the Newly Independent States
(NIS) for international organizations and financial institutions. For
the Energy Charter process Mr. Van Agt coordinated conferences in all
NIS and several Central European Countries with the Centre for Energy
Petroleum and Mineral Law & Policy at the University of Dundee Scotland
next to various law and consultancy firms.
Born in Nijmegen, The Netherlands in 1964, Christof van Agt studied
Slavonic Languages at the University of Leiden, the Herzen Institute
in Leningrad and Moscow and 'sovietology'; multidisciplinary studies
in Russian, law, economy, history and political sciences at the University
of Leiden, Faculty of Law from 1986 to 1991.
|
|

Paul
Holister
Nanotechnology & Energy
Paul Holister is a consultant
specialising in, among other things, the commercial and societal impacts
of new technologies. He is currently writing "Nanotechnology and the
Future of Energy", to be published by John Wiley and Sons.
Paul's consulting background
includes many years in the oil and gas sector as a business analyst
and system designer, working for multinationals such as Shell and Oracle.
He was an early entrant
into nanotechnology-related consulting, launching a popular nanobusiness
newsletter in 2000 and writing the well-received Nanotechnology Opportunity
Report in 2002. In addition to nanotechnology-related consulting for
a broad spectrum of businesses, he has been an expert advisor on nanotechnology
to the EU and the UK's Royal Society.
|
| ..
|

Humberto
Schwab
Director,
Club of Amsterdam
Innovation Philosopher,
EuroLAB
Humberto Schwab was born 1953 in Surabaya (Indonesia). He now lives
in Amsterdam and in Spain (province Girona).
Humberto Schwab studied physics
and philosophy at the University of Amsterdam, he worked at the Montessori
Lyceum Amsterdam, the Gerrit Rietveld Academie and at the Hogeschool van
Amsterdam.
He designed a philosophy method for high and higher education and published
on several aspects of education. He was the driving force behind parliaments
approval in 1998, of the introduction of philosophy in the Dutch high
school system. An innovative training course for teachers was designed
and executed by Humberto Schwab at the University of Amsterdam.
He developed several philosophy techniques like the value brainstorm,
concept analysis, differential analysis, assumption analysis and think
tank teaching method. He adjusted the Socratic discourse for educational
contexts. He co-designed the philosophy curriculum for the Dutch high
school system.
He trained several organisations in reflection on mission and ethics,
and advised governmental and other organisations on cultural affairs.
In the annual festival of philosophy he acts as "stand up philosopher".
He is chair of the Kalos society, which aims to improve the presence of
intellectual youngsters in the public domain.
Humberto Schwab has developed the EuroLAB method, in which the Socratic
discourse and the future scenario method are synthesized in a training
format in which participants reflect on their position here and now by
looking into a designed future. The participants combine all their knowledge
to make different, challenging scenarios.
The EuroLAB is also a learning method in which students from different
countries participate to brainstorm on urgent European matters. They produce
an advice for the European government on the chosen subject (migration,
water politics, media etc.). They learn by producing. Also they acquire
international experience. In the Pyrenean area in Girona (Spain) the EuroLAB
is developing steadily into a real virtual laboratory.Learning in an urgent
context, and innovate educational systems is his main target now.
www.xs4all.nl/~schwab
|
|
|

|
You can find resources related to this topic in
the sections
about
Books
Articles
Links
Club
of Amsterdam Journal
Jukebox
and for more events
Agenda
|
|
|

|
Club
of Amsterdam
Felix Bopp
Pieter Aertszstraat 83hs
1073 SL Amsterdam
The Netherlands
Phone +31-20-615 4487
Fax
+31-20-419 0266
lab@clubofamsterdam.com
www.clubofamsterdam.com
|
|
|