The Fletcher School

A Graduate School of International Affairs

William Moomaw

William Moomaw

William Moomaw

william.moomaw@tufts.edu

Phone: (617) 627-2732

Fax: (617) 627-3005

Office: Cabot 509C

Office Hours: By appointment or
sign up on office hours sheet
in Room C509

Address:
The Fletcher School
Tufts University
160 Packard Ave
Medford, MA 02155

Professor of International Environmental Policy and Director of the Center for International Environment and Resource Policy

Education

BA, Williams College
PhD in physical chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Professional Activities

Senior Director, Tufts Institute of the Environment; Co-Director, Global Development and Environment Institute; Co-Director, Public Disputes Program, Program on Negotiations; Convening Lead Author, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2001; Board of Directors, Consensus Building Institute; Science Advisory Committee, Earthwatch; Lead author, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2003.

Biography

William Moomaw is Professor of International Environmental Policy at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University, where he is the founding director of the Center for International Environment and Resource Policy, the Tufts Climate Initiative and co-founder of the Global Development and Environment Institute. He graduated from Williams in 1959, and is a physical chemist with a PhD from MIT. He works to translate science and technology into policy terms using interdisciplinary tools. His major publications are on climate change, energy policy, nitrogen pollution, forestry financing and management and on theoretical topics such as the Environmental Kuznets Curve. He was a coordinating lead author of the 2001 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change chapter on greenhouse gas emissions reduction, and for the special report on renewable energy due in 2010. He was a lead author of three other IPCC reports (1995, 2005 and 2007). The work of the IPCC was recognized with the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize. He also was an author for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment on nitrogen and serves on the Integrated Nitrogen Committee of the EPA Science Advisory board. He was the first director of the Climate, Energy and Pollution program at the World Resources Institute, and directed the Center for Environmental Studies at Williams College where he held an endowed chair in chemistry. He has received Teaching Awards at both Williams and at The Fletcher School, and an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Belgrade for his work on sustainable development. As an AAAS Congressional Science Fellow, he worked on legislation that eliminated American use of CFCs in spray cans to protect the ozone layer, and also worked on energy and forestry legislation. Dr. Moomaw currently serves on the Board of Directors of The Climate Group, Clean Air-Cool Planet (which he co-founded), Earthwatch Institute, Center for Ecological Technologies and the Consensus Building Institute. He has facilitated sessions with negotiators of international treaties. He and his wife, Margot have just completed a highly efficient zero net energy home in Williamstown that uses no fossil fuels. It is one of a handful of such homes to be built in northern climate zones, and its performance is being monitored for performance for the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

Programs & Centers

Courses

Fall 2009

GMAP Courses

Research Interests

Quantitative indicators of environment and development; sustainable development; trade and environment; technology and policy implications for climate change; water and climate change; biodiversity; negotiation strategies for environmental agreements.

Selected Publications

Books

Articles

  • "Aligning Values for Effective Sustainability Planning," Planning for Higher Education (2003);
  • "Energy, Industry and Nitrogen: Strategies for Reducing Reactive Nitrogen Emissions," Ambio (2002);
  • "Expanding the Concept of Environment Management Systems," Regulating From the Inside (2001);
  • "The Environment and Economic Transition in the Region," Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (1999);
  • "Renewable Energy in a Carbon Limited World," Advances in Solar Energy (1999);
  • "Are Environmental Kuznets Curves Misleading Us? The Case of CO2 Emissions," Environment and Development Economics (1998);
  • "Life-cycle Global Warming Impact of CFCs and CFC-Substitutes for Refrigeration," Journal of Industrial Ecology (1998);
  • "Going Around the GATT: Private Green Trade Regimes," Praxis Journal of Development Studies (1997);
  • "Adverse Implications of the Montreal Protocol Grace Period for Developing Countries," Journal of International Environmental Affairs (1997);
  • Principal Lead Author for "Industry" and "Industry, Energy and Transportation: Impacts and Adaptation," Climate Change 1995, Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (1996).