Science Literacy Week
Along with organizations from across Canada, Libraries & Cultural Resources is celebrating & exploring the theme of energy for this year's Science Literacy Week celebration from September 18-24, 2023.
Energy Education
Energyeducation.ca is a resource created by Dr. Jason Donev (Dept of Physics & Astronomy) and his team with over 1000 pages on the entire energy sector as well as on relevant economics, climate, physics, chemistry and geology as well related to energy. Here are some highlighted pages.
- Who has access to electricity?
- Where does our electricity come from?
- What are kinetic energy, potential energy, and energy in general?
- What is coal, and how is our use changing?
- What are our fossil fuel reserves like? They aren’t what people think! (The real problem with fossil fuels is that we aren’t running out!)
- There’s a difference between renewable and sustainable, and that difference is important.
- Energy use depends on where we live, and that’s changing in big ways.
- Population is growing but unevenly and that has big consequences for us using electricity as an energy currency.
eBooks
- Climate Toolkit: A Resource Manual for Science and Action - Version 2.0 by Frank Granshaw,Publication Date: 2020The Climate Toolkit is a resource manual designed to help the reader navigate the complex and perplexing issue of climate change by providing tools and strategies to explore the underlying science. As such it contains a collection of activities that make use of readily available on-line resources developed by research groups and public agencies. This includes chapter 24: Climate/Energy Pathways 2100 activity by creating your own “blueprint” for energy production and consumption from now until 2100. To do this you’ll need to 1) determine how to create sizable increases in global energy efficiency, 2) select a mix of energy resources to produce lower carbon emissions, and 3) select strategies for sequestering CO2.
- Electrify : an Optimist's Playbook for Our Clean Energy Future by Saul GriffithPublication Date: 2021Climate change is a planetary emergency. We have to do something now—but what? Saul Griffith has a plan. In Electrify, Griffith lays out a detailed blueprint—optimistic but feasible—for fighting climate change while creating millions of new jobs and a healthier environment. Griffith’s plan can be summed up simply: electrify everything. He explains exactly what it would take to transform our infrastructure, update our grid, and adapt our households to make this possible. Billionaires may contemplate escaping our worn-out planet on a private rocket ship to Mars, but the rest of us, Griffith says, will stay and fight for the future.
- Future Energy: Opportunities & Challenges by Thomas W. Kerlin by Thomas W. KerlinPublication Date: 2013How can we produce enough sustainable energy while avoiding unacceptable environmental consequences? To evaluate the various energy options, we must understand the science of each potential energy source and energy use technology. This book presents the science in an easy-to-understand way to enable readers to make informed decisions about what is possible and practical, and to choose lifestyle options to implement in their personal lives.
- Knowing Home: Braiding Indigenous Science with Western Science, Book 1 by Edited by Gloria Snively and Wanosts'a7 Lorna WilliamsPublication Date: 2016Knowing Home attempts to capture the creative vision of Indigenous scientific knowledge and technology that is derived from an ecology of a home place. The traditional wisdom component of Indigenous Science—the values and ways of decision-making—assists humans in their relationship with each other, the land and water, and all of creation. When we braid Indigenous Science with Western Science we acknowledge that both ways of knowing are legitimate forms of knowledge.
- Tar Wars: Oil, Environment, and Alberta's Image by Geo TakachPublication Date: 2017Tar Wars offers a critical inside look at how leading image-makers negotiate escalating tensions between continuous economic growth mandated by a globalized economic system and its unsustainable environmental costs. As place branding assumes paramount importance in an increasingly global, visual, and ecologically conscious society, an international battle unfolds over Alberta's bituminous sands. This battle pits independent documentary filmmakers against professional communicators employed by government and the oil industry. Tar Wars engages scholars and students in communications, film, environmental studies, social psychology, PR, media and cultural studies, and petrocultures. This book also speaks to decision makers, activists, and citizens exploring intersections of energy, environment, culture, politics, economy, media and power.
- Power Density: A Key to Understanding Energy Sources and Uses by Vaclav SmilPublication Date: 2015The first systematic, quantitative appraisal of power density, offering detailed reviews of power densities of renewable energy flows, fossil fuels, and all common energy uses. "There's no author whose books I look forward to more than Vaclav Smil." --Bill Gates In this book, Vaclav Smil argues that power density is a key determinant of the nature and dynamics of energy systems. Any understanding of complex energy systems must rely on quantitative measures of many fundamental variables. Power density--the rate of energy flux per unit of area--is an important but largely overlooked measure. Smil provides the first systematic, quantitative appraisal of power density, offering detailed reviews of the power densities of renewable energy flows, fossil fuels, thermal electricity generation, and all common energy uses. Smil shows that careful quantification, critical appraisals, and revealing comparisons of power densities make possible a deeper understanding of the ways we harness, convert, and use energies. Conscientious assessment of power densities, he argues, proves particularly revealing when contrasting the fossil fuel-based energy system with renewable energy conversions. Smil explains that modern civilization has evolved as a direct expression of the high power densities of fossil fuel extraction. He argues that our inevitable (and desirable) move to new energy arrangements involving conversions of lower-density renewable energy sources will require our society--currently dominated by megacities and concentrated industrial production--to undergo a profound spatial restructuring of its energy system.
Open Education
- 21st Century Energy Transition: how do we make it work?In this course from the University of Alberta and Canadian Society for Evolving Energy, you will join us to learn about the many energy sources available, and where technology is providing exciting new solutions to energy and environmental challenges.
- Science Literacy SkillsWe are often told not to believe everything we read online or see on TV—but how do we tell the difference between sensationalized statistics and a real scientific study? Learn how to spot sound science by exploring topics including pseudoscience, science communication (and miscommunication!), the holistic nature of Indigenous wisdom and how it can work with the scientific process, uncertainty and decision making.
Web Resources
- Canadian Centre for Energy InformationThe Canadian Centre for Energy Information (CCEI) is a convenient one-stop virtual shop for independent and trusted information on energy in Canada. It will continue to expand publicly available data and analysis to ensure that all Canadians have access to centralized energy information that is easy for a wide range of data users to understand. The CCEI is a partnership between Statistics Canada and Natural Resources Canada, in collaboration with Environment and Climate Change Canada and the Canada Energy Regulator. Canadian Centre for Energy Information External Advisory Committee (EAC) contributes to the continuous review of the Canadian Centre for Energy Information (CCEI)'s statistical outputs, foster program relevance and recommend priorities to the Deputy-level Federal-Provincial-Territorial (FPT) Steering Committee, which provides the governance for the CCEI.
- Council of Canadian Academies ReportsThe Council of Canadian Academies (CCA) convenes experts from across Canada and abroad to evaluate the best available evidence on complex scientific topics of public interest. Every project undertaken at the CCA is guided by a professional staff and is completed through in-person meetings, teleconferences, and hundreds of hours of research. Reports are freely available and topics of reports in progress are posted.
- Exploring Canada's Energy FutureBased on data from our Energy Futures reports, this interactive tool allows you to explore energy production and consumption trends and how possible energy futures might unfold for Canadians over the long term. You can explore data from the most recent report, or refer to previous reports.
- Canadian Renewable Energy Project MapThe research team from the University of Alberta project "Measuring Costs and Benefits of Energy Transitions" has compiled this database of renewable energy projects in Canada.
- Last Updated: Sep 17, 2024 8:49 AM
- URL: https://libguides.ucalgary.ca/scienceliteracy
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