Joseph J. Romm

Joseph J. Romm
Joseph Romm, 2007

Joseph J. Romm (born June 27, 1960) is an American author, blogger, physicist[1] and climate expert[2] who concentrates on methods of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and global warming and increasing energy security through energy efficiency, green energy technologies and green transportation technologies.[3][4] In December 2008, Romm was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In March 2009, Rolling Stone magazine named Romm to its list of "100 People Who Are Changing America".[5] In September 2009, Time magazine named him one of its "Heroes of the Environment (2009)", calling him "The Web's most influential climate-change blogger".[6]

Romm is a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress, where he writes and maintains their climate blog, Climate Progress. In 2008, Time magazine named Romm's blog one of the "Top 15 Green Websites".[7] In 2009, Thomas L. Friedman, in his column in The New York Times, called Climate Progress "the indispensable blog",[8] and in 2010, Time included it in a list of the 25 "Best Blogs of 2010".[9] Romm also writes regularly for several energy and news websites.

In the 1990s, Romm served as Acting Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy. Romm has published several books on global warming and energy technology. Technology Review wrote that his December 2006 book, Hell and High Water, "provides an accurate summary of what is known about global warming and climate change, a sensible agenda for technology and policy, and a primer on how political disinformation has undermined climate science."[10] Romm's 2010 book, Straight Up, released in April 2010, is a selection of his blog postings since 2007.

Contents

Biography

Early life and career

Romm was born and grew up in Middletown, New York, the youngest of three sons of Al Romm, managing editor of the Times Herald-Record newspaper,[11] and Ethel Grodzins Romm, an author, retired project manager, and former CEO of a technology company.[12] Romm's brother David was the host and producer of Shockwave Radio Theater, and his brother Daniel is a physician. Romm graduated from Middletown High School in 1978.[13]

The campus of MIT, where Romm earned his Ph.D in physics in 1987.

Romm then attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1982 and a Ph.D. in 1987, both in physics.[14][15] He pursued part of his graduate work at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.[16] In 1987, Romm was awarded an American Physical Society Congressional Science Fellowship for the U.S. House of Representatives, where he provided science and security policy advice on the staff of Representative Charles E. Bennett.[15]

From 1988 to 1990, Romm worked as Special Assistant for International Security at the Rockefeller Foundation. From 1991 to 1993, he was a researcher at the Rocky Mountain Institute. He co-authored the 1994 Rocky Mountain Institute Report, Greening the Building and the Bottom Line: Increasing Productivity Through Energy-Efficient Design.[17] For the Global Environment and Technology Foundation, he performed the first environmental analysis of a system integrating cogenerating fuel cells, fly wheels, and power electronics aimed at achieving very high-availability power.[18] In 1990 and 1991, Romm taught a course entitled "Rethinking National Security" at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs.[19]

In 1992, Romm published The Once and Future Superpower, a book describing his views on how to spend the peace dividend to restore America's economic, energy and environmental security.[20] In 1993, he wrote Defining National Security: The Nonmilitary Aspects, for the Council on Foreign Relations, describing how America's security depends on non-military factors such as how it obtains energy.[21] In 1994, Romm published Lean and Clean Management, a book that discussed management techniques that can reduce the impact of manufacturing and other industries on the environment while increasing productivity and profits.[22][23] He co-authored, with Charles Curtis, "MidEast Oil Forever," the cover story of the April 1996 issue of the Atlantic Monthly, which predicted higher oil prices within a decade and discussed alternative energy strategies. The same year, he co-authored a paper for the ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings on "Policies to Reduce Heat Islands".[24] In 1999, Romm published Cool Companies: How the Best Businesses Boost Profits and Productivity by Cutting Greenhouse Gas Emissions, the first book to benchmark corporate best practices for using advanced energy technologies, including fuel cells, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.[25][26]

Service at the U.S. Department of Energy

Forrestal Building, headquarters of the Department of Energy

Romm served as Acting Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Energy, in charge of the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy during 1997 and as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary from August 1995 through June 1998, and Special Assistant for Policy and Planning from 1993 to July 1995. This office, the largest research and development program in the world, with a budget at the time of $1 billion and 550 employees, assists businesses in the industrial, utility, transportation and buildings sectors to develop and use advanced clean energy technologies to cut costs, increase reliability, and reduce pollution.[4][18]

As Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Romm was in charge of all policy and technology analysis and programmatic development for the Office, which was then developing PEM fuel cells, microturbines, advanced cogeneration, superconductivity, building controls, photovoltaics and other renewables, biofuels, and hydrogen production and storage. Among other projects, he initiated, supervised, and publicized a comprehensive technical analysis in 1997 by five national laboratories of how energy technologies can best reduce greenhouse gas emissions cost-effectively, entitled Scenarios of U.S. Carbon Reductions.[27]

1998 to 2006

After leaving the Department of Energy, Romm was the executive director and founder of the non-profit Center for Energy and Climate Solutions, an organization based in the Washington DC area that helped businesses and U.S. States adopt high-leverage strategies for saving energy and cutting pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.[4] He was also a principal of the Capital E Group, which consulted on technology assessment and sustainable design services for clean energy technologies,[4][18] and sat on the Advisory Board of Securing America's Future Energy.[3]

Romm's books argue that hybrid cars, like the Toyota Prius, and PHEVs, are more effective in reducing greenhouse gases than hydrogen cars.

During these years, Romm wrote widely on global warming and energy technologies that can reduce global warming. His 2004 book, The Hype about Hydrogen, argues that putting off the implementation of current green technologies in favor of waiting for technological breakthroughs in hydrogen cars is a dangerous distraction that will delay urgently-needed government action on reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The book was named one of the best science and technology books of 2004 by Library Journal.[3] In 2004, he also wrote the National Commission on Energy Policy's report, "The Car and Fuel of the Future",[28] which was rated the #1 Hottest Article on Energy Policy by ScienceDirect.[29] He was also the principal investigator for the National Science Foundation project, Future Directions for Hydrogen Energy Research and Education (2004).[30] Romm is interviewed in the 2006 documentary film Who Killed the Electric Car?, directed by Chris Paine and narrated by Martin Sheen. In the film, Romm gives a presentation intended to show that the government's "hydrogen car initiative" is a bad policy choice and a distraction that is delaying the exploitation of more promising technologies, such as electric and hybrid cars that could reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase America's energy security. As of 2010, Romm continued to view hydrogen as a "breakthrough technology illusion".[31]

Romm's 2006 book Hell and High Water claims that humans have a window of opportunity of only about a decade to head off the most catastrophic effects of global warming. It calls upon Americans to demand government action to encourage and require the use of current emission-cutting technologies.[32] Tyler Hamilton, in his review of the book for The Toronto Star, wrote: "Whereas the first third of Romm's book presents overwhelming and disturbing evidence that human-caused greenhouse gases are the primary ingredients behind global warming, the pages that follow offer alarming detail on how the U.S. public is being misled by a federal government (backed by conservative political forces) that is intent on inaction, and that's also on a mission to derail international efforts to curb emissions."[33]

Climate Progress and recent years

Since late 2006, Romm has been a Senior Fellow at the Center for American Progress,[34] where he maintains and largely writes their climate blog, Climate Progress, which focuses on climate science, policy and reporting.[35] In 2008, Time magazine named Romm's blog one of the "Top 15 Green Websites", writing that it "counters bad science and inane rhetoric with original analysis delivered sharply. ... Romm occupies the intersection of climate science, economics and policy. Resist temptation to lump him in with knee-jerk enviros. On his blog and in his December 2006 book, Hell and High Water, you can find some of the most cogent, memorable, and deployable arguments for immediate and overwhelming action to confront global warming."[7] In 2010, Time magazine wrote, "Viewing climate change through the prism of national security, Romm analyzes breaking energy news and the relevant research, but most important, he challenges the beliefs and conclusions of the mainstream media on climate-change issues."[9] Romm also writes for other top internet energy and news sites, including The Huffington Post,[36] Grist,[37] Slate,[38] CNN,[39] and Salon.com.[40]

Romm has testified numerous times before congressional committees on energy and global warming issues, offering his views on government action to curb global warming.[41] For example, in April 2010, Romm testified before the Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives on how to optimize "Energy Tax Incentives Driving the Green Job Economy",[42] and in September 2007, Romm testified before the House Committee on Science and Technology on the subject of "Fuels for the Future", specifically the use of liquid fuel from coal, which Romm believes would accelerate global warming.[43] He also lectures on energy technology, global warming and how the media portrays climate change[44]

Romm is often cited, quoted or interviewed by journalists to explain the impact of public policy and energy technologies and applications on global warming and energy security, or to explain causes and impacts of climate change and influence of the media.[45] For example, in 2011, The Washington Post linked with approval to Romm's review of the scientific literature on climate change.[46] Time magazine explored Romm's critique of Matthew Nisbet[47] and praised his analysis of the decline of media coverage regarding climate change.[48] The same year, Technology Review quoted Romm regarding the relationship between government-assisted deployment and rapid innovation in energy technologies,[49] and the Toronto Star quoted Romm regarding President Obama's 2011 State of the Union address.[50] National Geographic quoted Romm about the part that the media has played in the dearth of information about climate reaching the public.[51] In 2010, MSNBC's Countdown with Keith Olbermann program interviewed Romm on how the military is taking action on climate change to improve national security;[52] Guernica Magazine interviewed Romm on the science and politics of global warming;[53] and The Atlantic reviewed a media call by Romm concerning the relationship between the January 2010 snowstorms in Washington, DC and global warming.[54] In 2009, MSNBC relied on Romm to assess natural gas hydrates,[55] and Romm was featured on 60 Minutes discussing so-called clean coal.[56] Romm was interviewed twice on Fox News in 2007[57] and was also interviewed on the radio about the 2007 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report on climate change, and on his views about global warming's politics and solutions.[58]

Romm's most recent book, Straight Up, was released by Island Press in April 2010.[59] The book is "largely a selection of his best blog postings over the past few years related to climate change issues".[60] TreeHugger describes the book as "a whirlwind tour through the state of climate change, the media that so badly neglects it, the politicians who attempt to address it (and those who obstruct their efforts and ignore [the] science), and the clean energy solutions that could help get us out of the mess."[61] On January 26, 2011, Romm sat on the panel of the Green Car Summit of the Washington Auto Show.[62][63]

Romm's views

Romm argues that rapid deployment of current carbon-reducing technologies is essential to mitigate the worst effects of global warming and preserve both the world economy and a comfortable climate.

The New York Times "Dot Earth" column reviewed Romm's views on global warming solutions on November 24, 2008, including his belief that, to combat global warming, humans cannot wait for new technologies and scientific breakthroughs; that instead we must "deploy existing and near-term low-carbon technologies as fast as is humanly possible".[64][65] In his blog, Romm has described the technology solutions that he believes can control global warming.[66] The New York Times also quoted Romm as stating that, to solve the climate crisis, "We will need a WWII-style approach". The article noted Romm's belief that "credible people" and the press should publicly support the notion that government action is needed to help solve the global warming crisis. In particular, the press should explain how current news stories, such as hurricanes, droughts and insect infestations are related to global warming.[64]

According to U.S. News & World Report, Romm believes that global warming "is advancing more swiftly than most people think and than the mainstream media usually report. He has called for significantly ramping up government spending on clean energy technology, halting the construction of new coal plants, rapidly increasing the use of energy-efficient technologies, and imposing a cap-and-trade system to sharply limit carbon dioxide emissions".[67] In 2006, in a radio interview, Romm stated, "Global warming is going to transform this country and our transportation and the way we live our lives. If we don't act pretty soon, in an intelligent fashion, then change will be forced upon us by the radically changed climate... global warming is the issue of the century".[68] In March 2009, Romm summarized and updated his views in an "introduction" to his blog,[69] and in another post, setting forth a summary of "global warming impacts".[70] Romm's 2010 book, Straight Up notes: "the bottom line is that the economic cost of action is low, whereas the cost of inaction is incalculably greater". Romm calculates that deployment of existing technologies on the massive scale that can save the climate can be accomplished at the cost of 0.12 percent of global GDP per year. He also asks, in the book, "will the United States be a global leader in creating jobs and exports in clean energy technologies, or will we be importing them from Europe, Japan, and the likely clean energy leader in our absence, China."[71]

Romm has been critical of media coverage of global warming. In his 2010 book, Straight Up, he wrote, "Historically, even the most respected newspapers have fallen into the trap of giving the same credence – and often the same amount of space – to a handful of U.S. scientists, most receiving funds from the fossil fuel industry, as they give to hundreds of the world's leading climate scientists. No surprise that much of the public has ended up with a misimpression about the remarkable strength of our scientific understanding and the need for action". He concludes, "more and more pieces are being written by senior political reporters, who know very little about global warming".[72]

Reputation

In December 2008, Romm was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science for "distinguished service toward a sustainable energy future and for persuasive discourse on why citizens, corporations, and governments should adopt sustainable technologies".[73][74] In March 2009, Rolling Stone magazine named Romm to its list of "100 People Who Are Changing America". Rolling Stone quoted David Roberts, a blogger at Grist to explain why Romm was chosen: "Joe combines two qualities you don't often find together. A deep knowledge of technology, policy and science along with genuine moral passion."[5] Former Houston, Texas mayor Bill White called Romm "the nation’s leading expert on energy efficiency."[75]

In 2009, U.S. News & World Report featured Romm as one of eight "key players" in its article "Driving Public Policy in Washington", calling Romm an "oft-cited expert on climate change issues, and a go-to witness at congressional hearings".[67] In 2009, Time magazine named Romm one of its "Heroes of the Environment (2009)". It wrote, "He combines ... intellect with a strong sense of moral outrage. He also possesses a Jon Stewart-like quality for pointing out the absurdity of his opponents."[6] Romm's blog, in addition to being named one of the "Top 15 Green Websites" by Time magazine, was ranked as the leading "Green site", in 2009, by Technorati.[76] In 2009, Thomas L. Friedman, in his column in The New York Times, called Climate Progress "the indispensable blog".[8]

In 2010, Time included Romm's blog in a list of the 25 "Best Blogs of 2010".[9] The same year, TreeHugger named Romm's blog the "Best Politics Website", adding, "this is the art of blogging at its best".[77] Also in 2010, the UK's The Guardian ranked Climate Progress at the top of its list of "bloggers" in its "Top 50 Twitter climate accounts to follow".[78] Reviewing Romm's 2010 book Straight Up, Bill McKibben wrote that Romm "knows his climate science ... [and] has been a persuasive voice for the most important truth about global warming: that it is a far worse problem than either politicians or the general public understand. ... Romm has been consistent in insisting that we have much of the technology necessary to at least begin tackling the problem." McKibben says that Romm has been "a tireless foil to the 'right-wing disinformation machine' that has tried – with great success ... to delay action by confusing and disheartening Americans about global warming. ... It requires a thick skin to take on the daily task of dealing with the disinformers, but Romm has the taste for this kind of blood sport, and the talent as well."[79] In March 2011, The New York Times called Romm "one of the country’s most influential writers on climate change".[80]

Personal life

Romm lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife and daughter. Romm has long had an interest in comedy. From 1994 through 2007, he was a regular contributor to The Style Invitational, a weekly humor contest run by The Washington Post. His entries appeared 343 times, including 16 winning entries, and he was the first "Rookie of the Year".[81] Among his submissions was the winning entry of what was later declared to be the best overall week's results of the Style Invitational's first decade. (A discarded first draft of some famous line: "We hold these truths to be, like, du-uuh.")[82]

Bibliography

In addition to his books and other publications discussed above, Romm has written or co-written numerous articles and lectured widely on global warming effects and solutions, clean technologies, business and environment issues and distributed energy. His articles have been published in Nature,[83] U. S. News and World Report,[84][85] Technology Review,[86] Issues in Science and Technology,[87] Forbes,[88] Foreign Affairs,[89] The New York Times,[90] the Los Angeles Times,[91] The Guardian,[92] The Washington Post, Science,[93] Scientific American,[94] Physics Today,[95] Physics World,[96] The Economist,[97] and Businessweek,[98] among other publications.

Romm and Prof. Andrew A. Frank co-authored "Hybrid Vehicles Gain Traction", published in the April 2006 issue of Scientific American, in which they argue that hybrid cars that can be plugged into the electric grid, Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, will be introduced in the next few years and will become standard in the automobile industry in the coming decades.[94] The same year, Romm published "California's Hydrogen Highway Reconsidered" in Golden Gate University Law Review.[99] In March 2007, Romm co-authored an article entitled "Plugging into the Grid: How Plug-In Hybrid-Electric Vehicles Can Help Break America's Oil Addiction and Slow Global Warming" in the Progressive Policy Institute's Policy Report newsletter.[100] Romm contributed a chapter to the 2007 book Energy and American Society: Thirteen Myths, disputing that "The Hydrogen Economy Is a Panacea".[101] In June 2008, Nature.com published an article by Romm entitled "Cleaning up on Carbon", in which he advocated "accelerating the deployment of the 11 wedges so they begin to take effect in 2015 and are completely operational in much less time than originally modelled by Socolow and Pacala."[102] In 2011, Nature published Romm's article Desertification: The next dust bowl, exploring the dangers to the world economy and populations of droughts that are projected to be caused by climate change.[83]

Books by Romm

  • Romm, Joseph (1992). The Once and Future Superpower: How to Restore America's Economic, Energy, and Environmental Security. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-11868-2. 
  • Romm, Joseph (1993). Defining National Security: The Nonmilitary Aspects. Washington: Council on Foreign Relations. ISBN 0-87609-135-4. 
  • Romm, Joseph (1994). Lean and Clean Management: How to Boost Profits and Productivity by Reducing Pollution. New York: Kodansha Amer Inc. ISBN 1-56836-037-1. 
  • Romm, Joseph (1999). Cool Companies: How the Best Businesses Boost Profits and Productivity by Cutting Greenhouse Gas Emissions. New York: Island Press. ISBN 1-55963-709-9. 
  • Romm, Joseph (2004). The Hype about Hydrogen, Fact and Fiction in the Race to Save the Climate. New York: Island Press. ISBN 1-55963-703-X.  An updated edition was published in 2005 (ISBN 1-55963-704-8). The book has also been translated into German as Der Wasserstoff-boom.
  • Romm, Joseph (2006). Hell and High Water: Global Warming—the Solution and the Politics—and What We Should Do. New York: William Morrow. ISBN 0-06117-212-X. 
  • Romm, Joseph (2010). Straight Up: America's Fiercest Climate Blogger Takes on the Status Quo Media, Politicians, and Clean Energy Solutions. New York: Island Press. ISBN 9781597267168. 

Selected journal articles and reports

  • Report: "The Self-Limiting Future of Nuclear Power" AmericanProgressAction.org, 2008
  • "The Car and Fuel of the Future", Energy Policy, 34 (2006), pp. 2609–14
  • "Future Directions for Hydrogen Energy Research and Education" (Principal Investigator), Report to the National Science Foundation, November 2004[30]
  • "The internet and the new energy economy", Resources, Conservation and Recycling, p. 36 (2002) pp. 197–210
  • "Combined Heat and Power for Saving Energy and Carbon in Buildings" (with Kaarsberg, Koomey, Rosenfeld and Teagen), Proceedings of 1998 ACEEE Summer Study, Pacific Grove, CA, 1999
  • Report: "The Internet Economy and Global Warming" (with Arthur H. Rosenfeld and Susan Herrmann), Center for Energy and Climate Solutions, The Global Environment and Technology Foundation, 1999–2000
  • "Engineering-Economic Studies of Energy Technologies to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions: Opportunities and Challenges" (with Brown, Levine, Rosenfeld and Koomey), Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, 1998
  • "A Roadmap for U.S. Carbon Reductions" (with Levine, Brown, and Petersen), Science, January 30, 1998, vol. 279, no. 5351, pp. 669–70
  • "Cool Communities: Strategies for Heat Island Mitigation and Smog Reduction" (with Rosenfeld, Hashem Akbari and Melvin Pomerantz), Energy and Buildings 28 (1998) pp. 51–62
  • "Policies to Reduce Heat Islands" "Policies to Reduce Heat Islands" (with Rosenfeld, Akbari, Pomerantz and Haider G. Taha), 1996 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings, Pacific Grove, CA. Vol. 9, p. 177
  • "Greening the Building and the Bottom Line: Increasing Productivity Through Energy-Efficient Design" (with Browning), Rocky Mountain Institute, November 1994 (peer-reviewed by U.S. Green Building Council); first published as Proceedings of 1994 ACEEE Summer Study, Pacific Grove, CA

Notes

  1. ^ Begley, Sharon. "Climate Pessimists Were Right", The Wall Street Journal, February 9, 2007
  2. ^ Garber, Kent. "Joe Romm, Influential Liberal Climate Change Expert and Blogger", U.S. News & World Report, March 31, 2009; and Lloyd Robin. "Geoengineering wars: Another scientist teases out a surprising effect of global deforestation". Scientific American, October 19, 2009
  3. ^ a b c Biography (Joseph J. Romm). Nuclearfoundation.org, The Foundation for Nuclear Studies, Washington, D.C., 2005, accessed November 29, 2010
  4. ^ a b c d About Us: Joseph Romm. Cleanhouston.org, Citizen’s League for Environmental Action Now, Houston, Texas, accessed November 29, 2010
  5. ^ a b "The 100 People Who Are Changing America", Rolling Stone magazine, March 18, 2009
  6. ^ a b "Heroes of the Environment 2009". Time magazine feature with quote, September 2009, linking to full article: Walsh, Bryan. "Heroes of the Environment 2009 – Activists: Joe Romm", Time magazine, September 2009.
  7. ^ a b Roston, Eric. "Green Websites: Climate Progress". Time.com, April 17, 2008 (originally published in Time magazine in 2007), accessed November 29, 2010
  8. ^ a b Friedman, Thomas L. "The Inflection Is Near?", The New York Times, March 7, 2009
  9. ^ a b c "Best Blogs of 2010". Time magazine, June 28, 2010
  10. ^ Talbot, David. "Hell and Hydrogen". Technology Review, March 12, 2007, accessed November 29, 2010
  11. ^ Al Romm was managing editor of the Times Herald-Record newspaper from the 1950s into the 1980s. See obituary.
  12. ^ See E. G. Romm's books in print at Amazon.com and this MIT article about the tech company where she was President and CEO. She is featured in Guy Kawasaki's 1995 book Hindsights, discussing management consensus building.
  13. ^ Epilogue yearbook, 1978, Middletown High School, p. 95
  14. ^ Romm, Joseph Jacob. "Applications of Normal Mode Analysis to Ocean Acoustic Tomography". American Doctoral Dissertations, Source code: X1987, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1987 (title information for Romm's Ph.D. dissertation), accessed November 29, 2010
  15. ^ a b Directory of APS & AIP Congressional Science Fellows: 1987–88 APS.org, accessed November 28, 2010
  16. ^ Romm's testimony before the U. S. House of Representatives Select Committee on Energy Independence & Global Warming, p. 6, July 18, 2007
  17. ^ Romm, Joseph and William D. Browning. "Greening the Building and the Bottom Line: Increasing Productivity Through Energy-Efficient Design". Rocky Mountain Institute, 1994 (reprinted March 4, 2004), accessed November 29, 2010
  18. ^ a b c Profile of Romm, Capital E, accessed November 29, 2010
  19. ^ School of International and Public Affairs Faculty Directory, 1989–1990 and 1990–1991
  20. ^ Romm, Joseph (1992). The Once and Future Superpower: How to Restore America's Economic, Energy, and Environmental Security. New York: William Morrow & Co.  (ISBN 0-688-11868-2)
  21. ^ Romm, Joseph (1993). Defining National Security: The Nonmilitary Aspects. Washington: Council on Foreign Relations.  (ISBN 0-87609-135-4)
  22. ^ Hardin, Judy. Review of Lean and Clean Management. Whole Earth Review, Fall, 1995 (reprinted by BNet, CBS Interactive), accessed November 29, 2010
  23. ^ Wernick, Iddo K. "Book Review, Lean and Clean Management, Romm, J.", International Journal of Environment and Pollution 5(2/3):314-6 1995
  24. ^ "Policies to Reduce Heat Islands". 1996 ACEEE Summer Study on Energy Efficiency in Buildings, Pacific Grove, CA. Vol. 9, p. 177 (with Rosenfeld, Akbari, Pomerantz and Taha)
  25. ^ Profile of Romm, Capital E, accessed November 29, 2010; Biography of Romm and list of publications Buildings.com, accessed November 28, 2010
  26. ^ Reviews of Cool Companies can be found here. See also Hertsgaard, Mark. "Corporate Greenhouse". The Nation, July 26, 1999, accessed at markhertsgaard.com, November 28, 2010
  27. ^ Report: "Scenarios of U.S. Carbon Reductions: Potential Impacts of Energy-Efficient and Low-Carbon Technologies by 2010 and Beyond". Interlaboratory Working Group, The Technology Evaluation Modeling and Assessment Group, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, September 1997 (click on "Acknowledgements"), accessed November 29, 2010
  28. ^ The Car and Fuel of the Future, 2004, reprinted in Energy Policy, vol. 34, issue 17 (November, 2006) pp. 2609–14, accessed 11 March 2009.
  29. ^ "Top 25 Hottest Articles", ScienceDirect.com, January - March 2007, accessed 11 June 2009.
  30. ^ a b Award Abstract, NSF.gov, January 29, 2004
  31. ^ Curry, Andrew. "Berlin Rallies for a Tricky Oil Alternative". National Geographic News, May 12, 2010
  32. ^ See Publisher webpage, and Review of the book.
  33. ^ Hamilton, Tyler. "Fresh alarm over global warming", Toronto Star, January 1, 2007, accessed 22 October 2009
  34. ^ "Joseph Romm: Senior Fellow". Center for American Progress, accessed November 29, 2010
  35. ^ Romm, Joseph (ed). Climate Progress blog. Climate Progress, Thinkprogress.org, accessed November 29, 2010
  36. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Can Obama Stop the Nuclear Bomb in the Senate Stimulus Plan?" The Huffington Post, February 2, 2009; "Bill Gates Is Wrong About 'Energy Miracles'", The Huffington Post, 15 February 2010
  37. ^ Romm, Joseph. "An open letter to James Hansen", Gristmill, November 24, 2008; "First five steps to a greener home...." Grist, March 16, 2009; "Stop the madness!: Congress reverses Chu's decision, flushes $100 million down the toilet pursuing hydrogen cars", Grist, July 23, 2009; and "Saudi Arabian reserves overstated by 40 percent, global production plateau imminent", Grist, February 11, 2011
  38. ^ Romm, Joseph. October 2007 article by Romm in Slate
  39. ^ Romm, Joseph and Richard Caperton. "Japan and future of U.S. nuclear power". CNN.com, March 14, 2011
  40. ^ Romm's recent Salon.com articles include "We're breaking all kinds of temperature records", May 17, 2010; "Real science comes to Washington", January 26, 2009; "Anti-science conservatives must be stopped", June 30, 2008; "The technology that will save humanity", April 14, 2008; and "The car of the future is here", January 22, 2008.
  41. ^ See, for example, his September 2000 testimony before the Senate Committee on Commerce, his March 2004 testimony before the House Science Committee and his July 2007 testimony before the House Select Committee on Energy Independence & Global Warming.
  42. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Testimony of Dr. Joseph Romm" before the Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C., April 14, 2010
  43. ^ Testimony of Joseph Romm before the Committee on Science and Technology, September 2007
  44. ^ See, e.g., "Energy Symposium: The Rosenfeld Effect". UCAL Berkely, 2006; "Climate Expert to Discuss Global Warming Solutions". Yale University, 2006; and "Unruly Democracy: Science Blogs and the Public Sphere". Harvard, April 2010.
  45. ^ Examples of Romm media interviews or commentary include the following: "Betting on green", The Economist, March 10, 2011; "Snow Fuels Global Warming Debate", CBS News, February 11, 2010; "A final campaign focus: Coal and CO2", The New York Times, November 3, 2008; and "Much ado about biomass co-firing with coal", Charleston Gazette April 2009
  46. ^ Plumer, Brad. "Global CO2 emissions rising faster than worst-case scenarios", The Washington Post, November 4, 2011
  47. ^ Walsh, Bryan. "Battling Over the Climate War". Time magazine, April 25, 2011
  48. ^ Browning, Dominique. "How Global Warming Fell Off the National Agenda", Time magazine, October 20, 2011
  49. ^ Rotman, David. "Praying for an Energy Miracle". Technology Review, March/April 2011
  50. ^ Barmak, Sarah. "State of the Union: Sputnik moment or simply spin?" Toronto Star, January 28, 2011
  51. ^ Inman, Mason. "Big Businesses’ Call for Climate Action: Strong Treaty, More Aid", October 20, 2011
  52. ^ "Video of my MSNBC interview". Lawrence O'Donnell, filling in for host Keith Olbermann, interviewed Romm on MSNBC's Countdown, April 22, 2010
  53. ^ Whitney, Jake. "The 700 Club". Guernica Magazine, April 2010. See also Kapur, Sahil. "Climate expert: Energy bill doomed without ‘all-out push’ from White House". The Raw Story, May 12, 2010
  54. ^ Good, Chris. "Center For American Progress: Snowstorm Doesn't Disprove Global Warming!" The Atlantic, February 11, 2010
  55. ^ "A new energy frontier?" MSNBC's Cosmic Log, August 20, 2009, accessed May 30, 2011
  56. ^ "60 Minutes: Is China The Real Problem?" 60 Minutes, CBS News, April 26, 2009. See also "The Dilemma Over Coal Generated Power", pp. 3–4, 60 Minutes, CBS News, April 23, 2009
  57. ^ Both interviews were by Shepard Smith on Fox News: January 31, 2007 and a follow up interview on March 12, 2007: "Climate Progress on Fox News (again)". Climate Progress, ThinkProgress.org, March 12, 2007, accessed December 3, 2010.
  58. ^ Radio interview is accessible here. February 2007
  59. ^ Straight Up at the Island Press website, accessed April 19, 2010.
  60. ^ Hamilton, Tyler. "Wente continues to mislead, misinform Canadian public", TheEnergyCollective.com, April 11, 2010
  61. ^ Merchant, Brian. "Straight Up Tackles Climate in the Blog Era". Treehugger.com, April 22, 2010
  62. ^ "2011 Green Car Summit to Tackle Energy Security, Future Strategies". washingtonautoshow.com, accessed February 7, 2011
  63. ^ Blanco, Sebastian. "DC 2011: Green Car Summit tones it down, looks ahead". green.autoblog.com, January 27, 2011
  64. ^ a b Revkin, Andrew C. "Joe Romm on Hansen’s Mistakes, Cap’s Limits", Dot Earth, The New York Times, November 24, 2008
  65. ^ Romm, Joseph. "The breakthrough technology illusion", Grist, April 6, 2009
  66. ^ Romm, Joseph. "How the world can (and will) stabilize at 350 to 450 ppm: The full global warming solution (updated)", Climate Progress, Thinkprogress.org, March 26, 2009, Center for American Progress Action Fund, accessed 23 October 2009.
  67. ^ a b Garber, Kent. "Driving Public Policy in Washington", U.S. News & World Report, p. 39, vol. 146, no. 3, April 2009 (online at "Top Energy Player: Joe Romm, Influential Liberal Climate Change Expert and Blogger")
  68. ^ "Earth & Sky interviews Joseph Romm about future cars", Earth & Sky transcript from Calcars.org, March 21, 2006, accessed 23 October 2009.
  69. ^ Romm, Joseph. "An Introduction to Climate Progress", Climate Progress, ThinkProgress.org, March 2009
  70. ^ Romm, Joseph. "An introduction to global warming impacts: Hell and High Water", Climate Progress, ThinkProgress.org, March 2009
  71. ^ Kreindler, Tony. "Joe Romm's Straight Up is a great resource for fact seekers on climate". Environmental Defense Fund, April 19, 2010
  72. ^ Romm, Joseph (2010). "chapter 1". Straight Up. New York: Island Press. ISBN 9781597267168. 
  73. ^ "AAAS Members Elected as Fellows", Science, December 19, 2008, Vol. 322, no. 5909, pp. 1806-10
  74. ^ "News Archives: AAAS Members Elected as Fellows", aaas.org, 19 December 2008, accessed 21 February 2010.
  75. ^ McDonald, Erika. "An Evening with Joe Romm, Author of The Hype About Hydrogen", Citizen's League for Environmental Action Now, 2004, accessed 23 January 2010.
  76. ^ Green Sites, Technorati, 3 November 2009
  77. ^ McDermott, Matthew. "Best Politics Website: Climate Progress". TreeHugger.com, April 8, 2010
  78. ^ "Top 50 Twitter climate accounts to follow". The Guardian: Environment Blog, May 11, 2010
  79. ^ McKibben, Bill, "Climate of Opinion". Washington Monthly, July/August 2010
  80. ^ Broder, John M. "House Panel Votes to Strip E.P.A. of Power to Regulate Greenhouse Gases". The New York Times, March 10, 2011
  81. ^ Fuller, Grace. Style Invitational statistics. Centralmarylandchorale.com, accessed November 28, 2010.
  82. ^ The Washington Post, March 9, 2003, p. F5
  83. ^ a b Romm, Joseph. Desertification: The next dust bowl, Nature, 478, 450–451, 27 October 2011
  84. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Global Warming Is Fact, and Denial Won't Change Climate Back", Opinion, U.S. News and World Report, March 23, 2010
  85. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Two Takes: The U.S. Needs to End Its Energy Dependence", Opinion, U.S. News and World Report, July 10, 2008
  86. ^ Romm's articles in Technology Review include: "Stimulating Green Energy", May/June 2009; "The Last Car You Would Ever Buy—Literally", June 18, 2008; "Greenhouse Gas", Vol. 108, no. 5, pp. 81–81 (review of Michael Crichton's State of Fear), May 2005; "Painting the Town White and Green" (with Rosenfeld, Akbari and Lloyd), February/March 1997; and "The Benefits of Lean and Clean", February/March 1995
  87. ^ Romm, Joseph. "The Hype about Hydrogen", Issues in Science and Technology, Spring 2004
  88. ^ Romm's articles in Forbes include: ""Digging Into The Senate Climate Bill", May 13, 2010; "Japan's Flying Geese", November 23, 1992 and "The Gospel According to Sun Tzu", December 9, 1991
  89. ^ Romm, Joseph and Amory Lovins. "Fueling a Competitive Economy", Foreign Affairs, Winter 1992
  90. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Fix Now, Save Later", The New York Times, January 11, 1993
  91. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Lots of Hot Air About Hydrogen", Los Angeles Times, March 28, 2004, pp. M.3–7
  92. ^ See Romm, Joseph. "How extreme weather could create a global food crisis", guardian.co.uk, February 4, 2011; and Romm, Joseph. "Genuine hope on climate change", guardian.co.uk, 22 September 2009
  93. ^ Romm, Joseph, Mark Levine, Marilyn Brown, and Eric Petersen. "A Road Map for U.S. Carbon Reductions", Science magazine, January 30, 1998
  94. ^ a b Romm, Joseph. "Hybrid Vehicles Gain Traction", Scientific American, 2006; and "The Verification of Compliance with Arms-Control Agreements” (with Hafemeister and Tsipis), Scientific American, March 1985, pp. 39-45
  95. ^ Romm, Joseph (with Rosenfeld and Kaarsberg). "Technologies to Reduce U.S. Carbon Dioxide Emissions by 2010", Physics Today, November 2000
  96. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Publicize or Perish", October 1, 2009
  97. ^ Romm, Joseph. "The Economist" Debate Series: Global Energy Crisis", August 19, 2008
  98. ^ Romm, Joseph. Article on Hurricane Katrina and global warming, Businessweek online, September 2005
  99. ^ Romm, Joseph. "California's Hydrogen Highway Reconsidered". 36 Golden Gate U. L. Rev. (2006), vol. 36, issue 3
  100. ^ Romm, Joseph and and Peter Fox-Penner. "Plugging into the Grid". Progressive Policy Institute, March 2007, accessed November 29, 2010
  101. ^ Energy and American Society – Thirteen Myths", (ed.) Benjamin K. Sovacool and Marilyn A. Brown (2007 ISBN 1-4020-5563-3
  102. ^ Romm, Joseph. "Cleaning up on carbon", Nature Reports: Climate Change, June 19, 2008, Nature Publishing Group, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited, accessed November 29, 2010

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