NEMWI New Logo Lg File

W E E K L Y  U P D A T E     August 28, 2017
In This Issue

Join Our Mailing List


QUICK LINKS 
 
New Safe Drinking Water Program Director Joins NEMWI August 28

Dr. Sridhar (Sri) Vedachalam joins the NEMWI staff as Director of the Safe Drinking Water Research and Policy Program and the Toward Sustainable Water Information Program, effective August 28, leading NEMWI's scientific research and policy education on water quality and its new safe drinking water program. His responsibilities include completing a State of the Region Report funded by the US Geological Survey that examines water monitoring in the region, a new study of drinking water treatment costs on the Mississippi River, and ongoing research relating to safe drinking water.

In announcing the appointment, NEMWI President and CEO Dr. Michael J. Goff noted "Dr. Vedachalam brings stellar scientific and policy credentials to his new role at NEMWI, and his experience and energy will prove to be invaluable as we endeavor to expand our water quality research and develop our new safe drinking water program.  All of us at NEMWI are looking forward to working with Sri in the years ahead."

Dr. Vedachalam holds a Ph.D. in Environmental Science from The Ohio State University (2011), a Master of Science in Agricultural, Environmental, and Developmental Economics (2010), and a Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering (2007).  

During 2017 Dr. Vedachalam served as an Environmental Legislative Fellow in Congressman Matthew Cartwright's House office.  Previously he was a Post-Doctoral Fellow at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health from 2015 to 2016 and a Post-Doctoral Associate at the New York State Water Resources Institute at Cornell University from 2011 to 2015. 

He is author and co-author of numerous articles in scientific journals.  His expertise in environmental science, water quality, drinking water, wastewater management, and water infrastructure, and his academic training in science, engineering, and economics, Dr. Goff noted, "will be huge assets as the Institute continues to develop its water quality and safe drinking water program."

His work on the Mohawk and Hudson River watersheds in New York addressed not just regional, but nationally relevant issues, such as affordability, aging infrastructure, extreme weather impacts, financing, and non-point source pollution. He has worked closely with community groups, and local and state agencies, and values these partnerships in dealing with the complex challenges facing the water sector.

NEMWI currently has grant-funded research on water quality and safe drinking water from the Mott Foundation, the Walton Family Foundation, the US Geological Survey, and the Great Lakes Protection Fund.

Dr. Sri Vedachalam can be contacted at 202-464-4005 or at  svedachalam@nemw.org.
Upcoming Congressional Briefing on Asian Carp Control

Asian Carp Management and Control in the
Ohio River 
and Upper Mississippi River  Basins .

Wednesday, September 6, 2017
12:00 PM - 1:00 PM
2043 Rayburn House Office Building

The Northeast-Midwest Institute's Mississippi River Basin Program will hold a Congressional briefing  in conjunction with the Mississippi River Cooperative Resource Association (MICRA), Congressman Mike Kelly (PA-03), and Congressman Ron Kind (WI-03) on Thursday, September 6, from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM. Lunch will be served.
 
The briefing will provide Congressional staff, regional and environmental organizations, and interested members of the public the opportunity to hear directly from stakeholders from the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers about the ongoing efforts to control the spread of Asian carp. The briefing will include an overview of current efforts to monitor, control, remove, and deter the spread of Asian Carp, as well as a discussion of the role of public-private partnerships in these efforts.

The list of speakers includes:
  • Mr. Mike Weimer, US Fish and Wildlife Service
  • Mr. Nick Frohnauer, MN Department of Resources
  • Mr. Ron Brooks, KY Department of Fish and Wildlife
  • Mr. Andre Raghu, Blue Shores Fishery
  • Mr. Greg Conover, MICRA, US Fish and Wildlife Service
Presentations will be followed by a Q + A session with the panel. Representatives from the US Army Corps of Engineers and US Geological Survey will also participate.


For more information, please contact Joe Vukovich, Senior Policy Analyst for the Mississippi River Basin Program at the Northeast-Midwest Institute.
Department of Energy Study Draws Mixed Response

On August 23, the Department of Energy released the final draft of a report on electricity markets and grid reliability. The report has drawn a mixed response from the stakeholders of America's electric grid, with many finding something to criticize while still discovering a silver lining elsewhere in the report.

The report does not, as some feared it might, blame renewable energy or environmental regulations for the closure of coal power plants. Instead, the report singles out the cheap cost of natural gas plants as the biggest factor.

Although this somewhat undercuts coal companies' attacks on renewables, the report was far from hostile to coal power overall. The report argues that too much renewable energy is a threat to grid stability, a claim which is in tension with other recent studies on the subject.

While in some ways the study did not blame renewables for closed coal plants, the report did recommend that the EPA soften the regulatory reviews of new coal plants, a suggestion which upset many environmentalists.

The report comes at a time when it is unclear exactly how hard President Trump will fight to fulfill campaign promises to revitalize the coal industry. Despite requests from coal executives, he has not invoked the emergency provisions of the Federal Power Act to help prop up ailing coal plants

For more information, please contact Joe Vukovich, Senior Policy Analyst for the Upper Mississippi River Basin Program at the Northeast-Midwest Institute.

NEMWI: Strengthening the Region that Sustains the Nation