Mark Diesendorf

Mark Diesendorf at CARECRC forum, Adelaide (2015)
Mark Diesendorf at CARECRC forum, Adelaide (2015)

Mark Diesendorf is an Australian academic and environmentalist, known for his work in sustainable development and renewable energy. He currently teaches environmental studies at the University of New South Wales (UNSW), Australia. He was formerly professor of environmental science and founding director of the Institute for Sustainable Futures at the University of Technology, Sydney and before that a principal research scientist with CSIRO, where he was involved in early research on integrating wind power into electricity grids. His most recent book is Sustainable Energy Solutions for Climate Change.

Biography

Diesendorf is the son of the engineer Walter Diesendorf and the poet Margaret Diesendorf. His PhD research was focused on applied mathematics and theoretical physics applied to the solar interior. His early postdoctoral research was diverse, including the analysis of ground and satellite data on VLF emissions, mechanisms of insect smell and vision, and biological catalysts. From 1975 to 1985 he worked in the CSIRO Division of Mathematics, the Australian national research organisation, on topics such as the integration of wind power into electricity grids.[1] He became a Principal Research Scientist and leader of the Applied Mathematics group in CSIRO.[2] He left CSIRO in 1985 after the organisation had terminated all research on renewable energy. From 1996 to 2001 he was Professor of Environmental Science and Founding Director of the Institute for Sustainable Futures at UTS and then director of a company Sustainability Centre Pty Ltd.

From 2004 to 2016, Diesendorf has been a Senior Lecturer and then Associate Professor and Deputy Director of the Institute of Environmental Studies at the University of NSW, now called UNSW Australia. In 2015 IES was abolished by the university and Diesendorf retired (nominally) in mid-2016 to become Honorary Associate Professor at UNSW. He continues to teach (as a guest lecturer), research and consult in the interdisciplinary fields of sustainable energy, sustainable urban transport, theory of sustainability, ecological economics, and practical processes by which government, business and other organisations can achieve ecologically sustainable and socially just development.[3]

Based on his belief that science, technology and economics should serve the community at large, Dr Diesendorf has been at various times the Secretary of the Society for Social Responsibility in Science (Australian Capital Territory), President of the Australia New Zealand Society for Ecological Economics, co-founder and Vice-President of the Sustainable Energy Industries Council of Australia, and co-founder and President of the original Australasian Wind Energy Association.[3]

Much of his recent and current research is on climate mitigation, especially transitioning electricity supply systems to 100% renewable energy. To this end he is involved with colleagues in the Centre for Energy & Environmental Markets at UNSW in scenario development, computer simulation modelling and energy policy. Previously Dr Diesendorf was one of the leading proponents calling for the ethical, scientific debate over public water fluoridation.[4] On this issue Diesendorf has authored several papers, including a major 1986 article entitled "The mystery of declining tooth decay" in the journal Nature, examining the need for a scientific re-evaluation of fluoridation, and has highlighted some of the contrary evidence.[1][5]

Books and recent peer-reviewed publications

Books

Recent journal papers (selected)

• Diesendorf M 2016. Shunning nuclear power but not its waste: assessing the risks of Australia becoming the world's nuclear wasteland. Energy Research & Social Science 19:142-147.

• Mey F, Diesendorf M, MacGill I 2016. Role of local government in facilitating renewable energy and community energy. Energy Research & Social Science 21:33-43.

• Delina L, Diesendorf M 2016. Strengthening the climate action movement: strategies and tactics from contemporary social action. Interface 8(1):117-141.

• Diesendorf M 2016. Subjective judgments in the nuclear energy debate. Conservation Biology 30(3):666-669.

• Wolfram P, Wiedmann T, Diesendorf M 2016. Carbon footprint scenarios for renewable electricity in Australia. J. Cleaner Production 124:236-245.

• Yangka D, Diesendorf M 2016. Modeling the benefits of electric cooking in Bhutan: a long term perspective. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 59:494–503.

• Delina L, Diesendorf M 2015. Strengthening the climate action movement: strategies from histories. Carbon Management 5(4):397-409..

• Risks, ethics and consent: Australia shouldn't become the world's nuclear wasteland. The Conversation 28 June 2016.

• Rapid transition to clean energy will take massive social change. The Conversation 9 May 2016; reprinted in RenewEconomy

• Renewable energy versus nuclear: dispelling the myths. The Ecologist, 19 April 2016, reprinted in RenewEconomy 22 April 2016.

• Dispelling the nuclear 'baseload' myth: nothing renewables can't do better! The Ecologist, 10 March 2016.

• Coal closures give South Australia the chance to go 100% renewable. The Conversation, 2015, http://theconversation.com/coal-closures-give-south-australia-the-chance-to-go-100-renewable-43182

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Diesendorf M. (1996). Fluoridation: breaking the silence barrier. In: Martin B (ed.). Confronting the experts. New York: State University of New York Press, pp.45–75.
  2. Greenhouse Solutions with Sustainable Energy – Free symposium
  3. 1 2 UNSW Institute of Environmental Studies
  4. Diesendorf, Mark. How science can illuminate ethical debates: A case study on water fluoridation. Fluoride. Vol 28, No. 2 87-104. 1995.
  5. R. Allen Freeze and Jay H. Lehr. The Fluoride Wars, John Wiley, 2009, p. 184.
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