Skip to main content
Climate
Search

Main navigation

  • Climate 101
    • What We Know
    • What Can Be Done
    • Climate Primer
  • Explore
    • Podcast
    • Explainers
    • Climate Questions
    • For Educators
  • MIT Action
    • News
    • Events
    • Resources
  • Search
MIT

Main navigation

  • Climate 101
    • What We Know
    • What Can Be Done
    • Climate Primer
  • Explore
    • Podcast
    • Explainers
    • Climate Questions
    • For Educators
  • MIT Action
    • News
    • Events
    • Resources
  • Search
PostJuly 31, 2017

Introduction to Sustainable Energy

This class uses an engineering approach to assess current and potential future energy systems, covering resources, extraction, conversion, and end-use technologies, with emphasis on meeting regional and global energy needs in the 21st century in a sustainable manner.

Instructors and guest lecturers will examine various renewable and conventional energy production technologies, energy end-use practices and alternatives, and consumption practices in different countries.

Students will learn a quantitative framework to aid in evaluation and analysis of energy technology system proposals in the context of engineering, political, social, economic, and environmental goals. Students taking the graduate version, Sustainable Energy, complete additional assignments.

Content highlights: Extensive lecture slides, problem sets and exams with some solutions

Taught By: Prof. Michael Golay, Prof. William Green, Jr., Dr. John C. Wright, Randall Field

by MIT OCW
Topics
Education
Energy
Electrification
Finance & Economics
Government & Policy

Related Posts

PostMay 6, 2026

Who Bears the Burden of Climate Inaction?

MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
PodcastApril 30, 2026

E6: An economist's guide to climate change

Ask MIT Climate Podcast
Ask MIT Climate
PostApril 28, 2026

Six from MIT awarded 2026 Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New American...

MIT News
Top row, l-r: Denisse Córdova Carrizales, Ria Das, and Ronak Desai. Bottom row, l-r: Stacy Godfreey-Igwe ’22, Arya Rao, Ananthan Sadagopan ’24.
PostApril 27, 2026

A faster way to estimate AI power consumption

MIT News
MIT and MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab researchers have developed a tool that predicts the energy use of AI workloads, helping data centers allocate resources efficiently and reduce wasted power.

MIT Climate Knowledge in Your Inbox

 
 

MIT Groups Log In

Log In

Footer

  • About
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Contact
MIT Climate Project
MIT
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • YouTube
  • Simplecast
Communicator Award Winner
Communicator Award Winner