MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
Through a framework combining renewable energy in microgrids, and Food, Energy, and Water (FEW) security and infrastructure, this course synthesizes concepts into a holistic approach to community planning, improvement, and resiliency.
- Learn about existing and emerging renewable energy sources and technologies and explore examples from Alaska, including solar, wind, geothermal, biomass, and hydroelectric facilities.
- Examine underlying causes of food, energy, and water insecurity in Arctic, subarctic, and northern rural communities.
- Gain insights into Arctic and subarctic lifestyles, including the roles and impacts of wild harvests, plant-based foods, and health disparities.
- Learn about food, energy, and water security and analyze the interactions among food, energy, and water usage, for example: energy and water use in the production, transportation, and storage of food; energy usage in treating drinking water and wastewater for human health; water demands and fuel costs for electricity production; appropriate food systems, energy, and water resource usage and allocation; climate change impacts, fossil fuels and environmental impacts.
- Gain specialized expertise on a variety of Arctic energy issues affecting its residents and Indigenous peoples, from engineering to social science to traditional community knowledge.
- Learn the key concepts with practical, Alaska-focused examples.
- Use real wind and solar data and various analysis tools to make community energy assessments.
- Apply the FEW nexus approach to guide decisions about renewable energy alternatives.
- Learn from National Science Foundation-funded researchers and staff from a variety of disciplines at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, the University of Alaska Anchorage, the University of Calgary, Stanford, and the private sector. Connections with United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
This course is part of the Resilient Energy Systems for Sustainable Communities XSeries program.
What you'll learn
- Explore current states of food, energy, and water systems in rural Alaska, with broader applications to the Arctic.
- Compare mature and emerging renewable energy technologies with examples from Alaska
- Define how food, energy, and water impacts community well-being in the Arctic and beyond.
- Analyze the feedbacks between renewable energy generation and the local drivers of food, energy, and water security.
- Explore and discuss scientific and social issues that arise when utilizing food, energy, and water resources.
- Organize and quantify food and water security data.
- Use renewable energy resource data to create energy assessments.
- Learn how modular food and water applications can optimize renewable energy inputs in the Arctic and beyond.
- Apply decision making methodologies to develop community level recommendations based on resource energy assessments combined with food and water security information.
Syllabus
Module 1: Life in Alaska
- Introduction to Alaska
- Introduction to the Food, Energy, Water (FEW) Nexus
- Introduction to FEWtureville
- Rural Electricity and Heating Systems
- Rural Food Systems
- Rural Water and Wastewater Systems
- FEWtureville Case Study
Module 2: Energy Nuts & Bolts
- Diesel Generators in Remote Communities
- Renewable Energy Technologies
- Energy Resource Data
- FEWtureville Case Study
Module 3: Community Well-Being
- What is Food, Energy, Water (FEW) Security
- Factors Affecting FEW Security
- Assessing FEW Security
- FEWtureville Case Study
Module 4: Making Decisions
- Electrified Load Applications
- Analysis Tools: NRMSE Method
- Analysis Tools: FEW Indices
- Putting It All Together
- The Years to Come
MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.
MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.