The Ann Arbor News,
5/7/2008
As energy prices shoot higher finding new ways to satisfy
them are making their way farther and farther up the priority list for
research. The University
of Michigan is leading
the way by incorporating more alternative energy research into its hallowed
halls.
Excerpt:
Our energy problems won't be solved by new technologies
alone, say professors at the University of
Michigan, which is trying to enlist the aid of experts in social science
and human behavior in clean energy research.
Energy, which will be the subject of a theme semester
involving students at U-M's biggest college next fall, is becoming an
increasing focus of research on campus. As that happens, professors say they
need to take a more interdisciplinary approach to the complex questions
surrounding energy and its use.
"When you look at technology, there's an awful lot of
great ideas and widgets that have never left the lab bench," said Gary
Was, director of the Michigan Memorial
Phoenix Energy Institute on campus.
Read the rest of the story here.