Univ courses on alternative energy/environmental engineering

jag

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Has anyone seen (or even better taken) courses on topics including alternative energy and engineering modelling and design in an environmentally sensitive way? I was thinking such a class could also have practical projects building eBikes or other electric vehicles.

I took a course on "Natural resources and society" It covered topics of energy generation from different sources, planning and economics. I found it more suited to people (politicians and government) who deal with large scale decisions. The drawback was that the class was not very informative for the 99% of us where the decision is to buy an eBike, prius or an SUV rather than build a coal, gas or nuclear power plant.

I've been wondering how to create interest and knowledge for the general population on issues such as:

- How much do I really save by buying a new refrigerator (remember Matt Gruber's thread)?
- I now drive x km by car. If I bike or eBike the y km shorter trips and drive only z km, with x = y + z, what selection of y and z make sense? (given e.g. the different costs of an eBike with different ranges)
- Should I upgrade my windows, attic insulation or furnace first? (now you can pay a home inspector to answer this, but why not understand the calculation yourself)
- What is the sweetspot for dimensioning a geothermal heatpump given a heating need? (Here consumers apparently commonly are disapointed when adverticed savings don't materialize)
- What is the environmental benefit of installing a heatpump? (Apparently not much if your electricity is from coal or oil)

Any links, tips or experiences with courses or course material would be appreciated.
 
I took two that come to mind right off, and there are more offered.

ECE 438 Electric and Hybrid Electric Vehicles
(when I took it it was still an ECE 499 ST class)

GEO 308 global change and earth sciences
this was all about long term environmental trends in history, and how modern trends compare, and a details of the systems that comprise the biosphere and what can effect the climate and in what ways it would. The prof was way left wing, but I still learned a lot (I'm a bit liberal myself).

We have an entire program called environmental engineering (B.S. EnvE), and its not just some small degree we made up either.
Some of the girls in that one are really cute too.

PH 313 energy alternatives
I thought about taking it, but it didn't fit into my schedule anyway. its a common bacc-core class.

ENGR 350 Sustainable Engineering
I didn't really want to take this one so much as it sounded like a lot of the usual overly left wing rhetoric, but I could be wrong.

There are also environmental science classes here, and a forestry engineering management B.S. degree.

Our course listings can be found here
http://catalog.oregonstate.edu/Default.aspx?section=Course

Really, there is a pretty big push for environmentally friendly design methodologies and/or considerations to be introduced in the classroom, for my department (EECS) a few years back we got a new building (Kelly engineering center) which is supposed to have a bunch of fancy eco-friendly features (its so futuristic that the Corvallis historical society had a collective coronary when they saw it, and haven't stoped b_______ since).

also, you can get to our engineering class websites here (long as the prof makes em public, lot of times they get left up long term for years).
http://classes.engr.oregonstate.edu/

And the physics department is over there
http://physics.oregonstate.edu/Courses

Oh good god I didn't just become that guy......... (quickly runs over self with a bike)
 
Those courses seem more exciting than the ones we have at UofAlberta. Perhaps too much oil money is lining the pockets of deans and univ. admins here.

Our Environmental Engineering and Science program includes riveting titles such as:
ENV E 421 MUNICIPAL SYSTEMS
Detailed and advanced design of water supply systems, sewerage, and storm drains.

ENV E 471 ELEMENTS OF STRUCTURAL DESIGN
Structural design principles in steel and concrete as applied to environmental engineering type structures such as pipes, tanks, beams, columns, slabs, and foundations.
More at:
http://www.engineering.ualberta.ca/environmental/course_descriptions.cfm
 
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