David Elliott (professor)

David Elliott is Professor of Technology Policy at the Open University. He has created several courses in Design and Innovation, with special emphasis on how the innovation development process can be directed towards sustainable technologies. Professor Elliott's main research interests include the development of sustainable energy technologies, particularly renewable energy systems.[1][2]

Selected publications

  • Nuclear or Not? Does nuclear power have a place in a sustainable energy future?, Palgrave, 2007.
  • Sustainable Energy: Opportunities and Limitations, Palgrave, 2007.
  • "Energy Regime Choices: Nuclear or Not?", Technology Analysis & Strategic Management, Vol. 18, No. 5, 1–6, December 2006.
  • "Comparing Support for Renewable Power" in V Lauber (ed) Switching to Renewable Power, Earthscan, pp 219–227, 2005, ISBN 1-902916-65-4[1]
  • 'Fukushima: impacts and implications', Palgrave Macmillan, 2012
  • 'Renewables: A review of sustainable energy', supply options Institute of Physics, 2013
  • 'Green Energy Futures', Palgrave Pivot e-book, 2015
  • 'Balancing Green Power', Institute of Physics, 2016
  • 'Nuclear Power: past, present and future', Institute of Physics, 2017
  • 'Renewable Energy: from Europe to Africa', Palgrave pivot, with T.Cook, 2018
  • 'Renewable Energy: past, present and future'. Palgrave, 2019
  • Web link to Blogs and Renew newsletter:

https://renewnatta.wordpress.com

gollark: Some sort of mesh networking would make more sense than everything having expensive hardware to communicate with a faraway tower, for that.
gollark: How do you do IR phased arrays? I thought you couldn't really control the phase well enough given the high frequency? Something something lasers?
gollark: Do you count websockets as HTTPS?
gollark: My website is a PWA. I just shoved on a service worker and manifest file.
gollark: Hmm, yes, fair. I don't think the experimental P2P stuff has been very successful.

See also

References

  1. "Prof David Elliott". The Faculty of Mathematics, Computing and Technology. The Open University. Retrieved September 12, 2016.
  2. Nuclear Or Not?


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