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Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 209

Appendixes

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 210

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 211

A

Workshop Participants

Justine Alchowiak, U.S. Department of Energy

Richard C. Alkire, University of Illinois

Gary C. April, University of Alabama

Richard A. Bajura, West Virginia University

R. Thomas Baker, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Patricia A. Baisden, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Krishnan Balasubramanian, University of California, Davis

Alexis T. Bell, University of California, Berkeley

Adolph Beyerlein, Clemson University

Robert Bloksberg-Fireovid, National Institute of Standards and Technology

David C. Bonner, Rohm and Haas Company

Thomas F. Brownscombe, Shell Chemical Company

Donald M. Burland, National Science Foundation

Richard Cavanagh, National Institute of Standards and Technology

Margaret Cavanaugh, National Science Foundation

Thomas W. Chapman, National Science Foundation

David Chock, Ford Motor Company

Steven S.C. Chuang, The University of Akron

David Cole, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Walter G. Copan, The Lubrizol Corporation

Geraldine V. Cox, EUROTECH, Ltd.

Carol A. Creutz, Brookhaven National Laboratory

Glenn A. Crosby, Washington State University

Daniel L. Dubois, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Stan A. Duraj, Cleveland State University

James A. Edmonds, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Gary Epling, University of Connecticut

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 212

Giuseppe Fedegari, Fedegari Autoclavi SpA

Frederick P. Fendt, Rohm and Haas Company

Farley Fisher, National Science Foundation

Brian P. Flannery, Exxon Mobil Corporation

Emory A. Ford, Equistar Petrochemical Co.

Richard D. Foust, Jr. Northern Arizona University

Hans Friedericy, Honeywell, Inc.

John W. Frost, Michigan State University

Etsuko Fujita, Brookhaven National Laboratory

Jean H. Futrell, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Dorothy H. Gibson, University of Louisville

Patrick R. Gruber, Cargill Dow LLC

J.Woods Halley, Department of Physics

Heinz Heinemann, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

George R. Helz, University of Maryland

Jason Hitchcock, U.S. Department of Agriculture

Jerry E. Hunt, Argonne National Laboratory

Andrew Kaldor, Exxon Mobil

David W. Keith, Carnegie Mellon University

Dahv Kliner, Sandia National Laboratory

Harold H. Kung, Northwestern University

Klaus S. Lackner, Los Alamos National Laboratory

Antonio O. Lau, BP Chemicals

Dennis L. Lichtenberger, University of Arizona

Michael J. Lockett, Praxair Inc.

Keith E. Lucas, Naval Research Laboratory

Digby D. MacDonald, Pennsylvania State University

Leo E. Manzer, E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company

Robert S. Marianelli, Office of Science and Technology Policy

Tobin J. Marks, Northwestern University

William S. Millman, U.S. Department of Energy

James A. Moore, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Dennis F. Naugle, Research Triangle Institute

Chandrakant B. Panchal, Argonne National Laboratory

Charles Peden, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Thomas B. Rauchfuss, University of Illinois

Douglas Ray, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Mark W. Renner, Brookhaven National Laboratory

D. Paul Rillema, Wichita State University

Sharon M. Robinson, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Howard Saltsburg, Tufts University

Eric A. Schmieman, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Peter Schultz, National Research Council

Darlene Schuster, American Institute of Chemical Engineers

Jeffrey J. Siirola, Eastman Chemical Company

Aleksandar Slavejkov, Air Products & Chemicals, Inc.

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 213

Christine S. Sloane, General Motors

Jack Solomon, Praxair Inc.

James A. Spearot, General Motors

Peter G. Stansberry, West Virginia University

Ellen B. Stechel, Ford Motor Company

John Stringer, Electric Power Research Institute

Kyung W. Suh, The Dow Chemical Company

Rosemarie Szostak, U.S. Department of the Army

David C. Thomas, BP Amoco Corporation

John A.Turner, National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Olaf Walter, Institute for Technical Chemistry

G. Paul Willhite, University of Kansas

Bobby Wilson, Texas Southern University

Robert B. Wilson, Jr., SRI International

Alan M. Wolsky, Argonne National Laboratory

Richard P. Wool, University of Delaware

Staff: Maria P. Jones, Ruth McDiarmid, Sybil A. Paige, Douglas J. Raber

Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 209
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
×
Page 210
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
×
Page 211
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
×
Page 212
Suggested Citation:"Appendix A: Workshop Participants." National Research Council. 2001. Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/10153.
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Page 213
Next: Appendix B: Biographical Sketches of Workshop Speakers »
Carbon Management: Implications for R&D in the Chemical Sciences and Technology Get This Book
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Considerable international concerns exist about global climate change and its relationship to the growing use of fossil fuels. Carbon dioxide is released by chemical reactions that are employed to extract energy from fuels, and any regulatory policy limiting the amount of CO2 that could be released from sequestered sources or from energy-generating reactions will require substantial involvement of the chemical sciences and technology R&D community.

Much of the public debate has been focused on the question of whether global climate change is occurring and, if so, whether it is anthropogenic, but these questions were outside the scope of the workshop, which instead focused on the question of how to respond to a possible national policy of carbon management. Previous discussion of the latter topic has focused on technological, economic, and ecological aspects and on earth science challenges, but the fundamental science has received little attention. This workshop was designed to gather information that could inform the Chemical Sciences Roundtable in its discussions of possible roles that the chemical sciences community might play in identifying and addressing underlying chemical questions.

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