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George P. MitchellHARC's founder in the media
George Mitchell named one of "top global thinkers"

George Mitchell, the prominent Houston businessman who founded the Houston Advanced Research Center, has been in the media spotlight because of his achievements in the natural gas industry and his commitment to sustainability.

Mitchell was named by Foreign Policy magazine in its December issue as one of the most significant "global thinkers." He shares one of the 100 places on that list with two geologists:

The FP top 100 global thinkers / 36: Terry Engelder, George Lash, George P. Mitchell / For upending the geopolitics of energy

Nearly 30 years ago, a Texas oilman named George P. Mitchell threw his money behind an idea: that breaking apart dense underground shale formations could release vast reserves of natural gas. The bet took over a decade to pay off, but the wait was worth it, not only making Mitchell a billionaire, but also fundamentally reordering the global balance of energy and the political power that comes with it.

Only in the past several years has the extent of the shake-up become fully apparent. Thanks to investments made by Mitchell's industry heirs in hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," U.S. shale gas production nearly quintupled between 2006 and 2010 to 4.8 trillion cubic feet -- almost a quarter of U.S. natural gas production -- and prices plummeted. Meanwhile, geologists have mapped eye-poppingly large shale gas reserves throughout Europe and the United States -- most notably Terry Engelder and Gary Lash, who in 2008 estimated the reserves of the U.S. Northeast's Marcellus Shale formation at a monstrous 500 trillion cubic feet, making it the world's largest unconventional natural gas reserve. [read more]

The Bryan-College Station Eagle reported on Foreign Policy's recognition of Mitchell, a major supporter of his alma mater, Texas A&M University:

Aggies George Mitchell, Terry Engelder hailed for fracking contributions

A pair of Aggies made a respected magazine's 2011 list of the top 100 global thinkers.

George Mitchell, who earned a bachelor's in petroleum engineering in 1940, and Terry Engelder, who earned a doctorate from A&M in geology in 1973, were selected by Foreign Policy's editors, who noted their role in the geopolitics of energy. [read more]

In August, the Philadelphia Inquirer profiled Mitchell:

Tapping shale, seeking sustainability / A rare oilman

HOUSTON - It wouldn't be a stretch to call George P. Mitchell the father of shale gas.

The billionaire tycoon is widely credited with developing the hydraulic-fracturing technique that has triggered a rush to tap into formations like Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale. Shale-gas discoveries have added decades of supply to the nation's reserves.

[...]

What may be more surprising - especially to those who associate hydraulic fracturing with charges of environmental degradation – is that the man who pioneered shale drilling regards his fossil-fuel discoveries as secondary to his work promoting a sustainable world.

"There's no doubt this nation is strong because of oil and gas," Mitchell, 91, said in an interview Wednesday in his downtown Houston office. "But sustainability is the most important thing I'm working on." [read more]


HARC Announces New Leadership
Jim Lester and Lisa GonzalezNew leaders will take the helm at the Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC), a nonprofit organization addressing environmental and sustainability issues in Texas.

Jim Lester, an expert on the management of water, air and biological resources, becomes president and CEO, while Lisa Gonzalez, a specialist on coastal issues, assumes the position of vice president and chief operating officer.

"As HARC’s chief operating officer for the past six years, Jim is immersed in our culture, and the transition will be seamless," said Todd Mitchell, chairman of the HARC Board.

"Jim is well known across Texas for his leadership in programs related to regional air quality, aquatic ecosystems and water scarcity," Mitchell said. "He is well prepared to continue HARC’s tradition of introducing non-partisan science into environmental policy debates."

Lester succeeds Robert Harriss who will continue his affiliation as a distinguished fellow at HARC.

Mitchell credits Dr. Harriss, who served as president since 2006, with taking the institution to a new level.

"Bob Harriss possesses the rare combination of outstanding scientific credentials, a big network of friends and collaborators, and an appreciation of the social dimensions of sustainability science," Mitchell said. "Under Bob’s guidance we have deepened our research and business teams and strengthened our relationships with universities and funding agencies."

Jim LesterDr. Lester said that HARC will continue the work begun by both Mitchell and Harriss to improve sustainability and the environment in Texas.

"We hope to broaden our research to focus on all the key sustainability issues in Texas and serve a wider client base, including business, all levels of government and nongovernmental organizations," Lester said. "This work will be crucial to Texas’ future, its quality of life, economic stability and environmental health."

Lester joined HARC in 2002 as director of HARC’s environmental group and in 2006 was named vice president and chief operating officer. From 1975 to 2002 he worked for the University of Houston System and held administrative positions at the UH-Clear Lake as a dean, associate vice president and director of the Environmental Institute of Houston.

Lester, who holds a Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Texas at Austin, is currently engaged in projects that analyze datasets from multiple sources to obtain new insight for watershed or landscape management.

He serves as chair of the Monitoring and Research Committee of the Galveston Bay Estuary Program, vice chair of the Trinity San Jacinto Basin and Bay Expert Science Team on environmental flows and on advisory committees for the Texas Sea Grant Program, Texas A&M University College of Geosciences and the Texas Environmental Research Consortium.

Lisa GonzalezGonzalez joined HARC in 2002. As a research scientist, she manages projects related to coastal water quality, fish and wildlife populations, invasive species, habitat characterization, freshwater inflows and seafood safety. Her research focuses on the analysis and dissemination of data relating to the health and productivity of bays and estuaries, coastal watersheds and the Gulf of Mexico. Her past projects include the State of the Bay: A Characterization of the Galveston Ecosystem (2011), the Galveston Bay Status and Trends Project (2002-2011), The Quiet Invasion Galveston Bay invasive species field series (2010) and the Texas Coastal Management Performance Measurement System (2010).

Prior to joining HARC, Gonzalez worked for the Environmental Institute of Houston at UH-Clear Lake. She also served as operations manager at the Institute of Marine Life Sciences at Texas A&M University at Galveston. She holds an M.S. degree in environmental management from UH-Clear Lake and a B.S. degree in marine fisheries from Texas A&M at Galveston.

Gonzalez serves on a variety of local and regional committees for groups including the Galveston Bay Estuary Program and the Gulf and South Atlantic Regional Panel on Aquatic Invasive Species.

@HARC Newsletter

Leadership transition at HARC: Harriss to step down as president; Lester will assume top position

Jim Lester, Todd Mitchell, and Bob Harriss
Jim Lester, Todd Mitchell, Bob Harriss

‎December ‎3, ‎2011

The Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC) will experience a transition in its top leadership over the next few months.

Robert Harriss, president and CEO since 2006, will be stepping down from that position and continue a part-time affiliation with HARC as a scientist on the research staff.

Jim Lester, vice president and chief operating officer during Harriss' tenure, will assume the top executive job. Lester joined HARC in 2002 as director of the Environment Group.

HARC, founded by the prominent Houston businessman George Mitchell, is a not-for-profit organization based in The Woodlands, Texas, which works to improve the well-being of people and ecosystems by applying sustainability science and the principles of sustainable development.

Todd Mitchell, chairman of HARC's board of directors and a son of George Mitchell, told the HARC staff that board members have "a lot of confidence that this will be a smooth transition."

Todd Mitchell was president of HARC from 2001 until 2006. He said that under Harriss' and Lester's leadership, HARC has broadened and deepened its activities, strengthening relationships with businesses and clients.

Harriss rebuilt HARC's relationships with Texas universities and hands the presidency to Lester with HARC a more stable organization in spite of difficult economic conditions, Todd Mitchell said.

Lester has provided strength during those hard times and enjoys the board's full support, he added.

Harriss told staff members they would "still see a lot of me" in his new position as a HARC scientist. Among other activities, he will spend more time on research interests in the Arctic, teach at Rice University, and remain active with HARC's Texas Climate Initiative and Third Ward Project.

Lester said he believes HARC will emerge from the challenges resulting from the recession as a stable, independent organization that expands its contributions toward the creation of a better future.

Harriss was previously senior scientist and director of the Institute for the Study of Society and the Environment at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Prior positions included a Harvard University postdoctoral fellowship and faculty appointments at McMaster University (Canada), Florida State University, University of New Hampshire, Texas A&M University, and the University of Colorado.

Harriss also served as a senior scientist in ocean and atmospheric sciences at the NASA Langley Research Center and as science director for NASA’s Mission to Planet Earth Program. He obtained a Ph.D. in Geochemistry from Rice.

As director of HARC’s Environment Group, Lester developed and implemented projects to make management of water, air and biological resources more sustainable. From 1975 to 2002, he was a faculty member and administrator in the University of Houston System, serving at UH-Clear Lake as a dean, associate vice president, and director of its Environmental Institute of Houston.

Lester obtained a Ph.D. in Zoology from the University of Texas at Austin. In his scientific work, he has applied principles of ecology and population genetics to projects involving biodiversity and sustainable aquaculture. He chairs the Galveston Bay Estuary Program's Monitoring and Research Committee and serves on advisory committees of the Texas Sea Grant College Program and the Texas A&M University College of Geosciences.

 

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Center for Houston's Future

Counting on Quality of Place
  2011 Regional Symposium

 

Don't miss this opportunity to hear from the experts on Water Quality, Water Supply, and Green Buildingsin the Greater Houston region.

Register Now

January 28, 2011

7:30am-8:30am
(Private sponsor reception with elected officials.  See Registration Form)

8:30am - 2:00pm
Main Event

George R. Brown Convention Center

Honorary Chair: E.D. Wulfe
President, Wulfe & Co.

See also:  SYMPOSIUM PROGRAM  or  REGISTER NOW

 

Ray Anderson, sustainable business pioneer and Mitchell Prize recipient, dies at 77

August 9, 2011 - Ray C. Anderson, a green business pioneer and 2001 recipient of the George and Cynthia Mitchell International Prize for Sustainable Development, has died at 77.

Anderson was the founder of Atlanta-based Interface, the world’s largest manufacturer of modular carpet. Houston businessman and philanthropist George Mitchell founded the Houston Advanced Research Center (HARC), which is dedicated to improving human and ecosystem well-being through the application of sustainability science and principles of sustainable development.

The Sustainable Business Blog of Britain’s Guardian newspaper, reporting Anderson’s death, related his account of how he became committed to business sustainability:

As he recalled in his extraordinary book, Confessions of a Radical Industrialist, his own paradigm shift came when he was being asked to provide his company with an environmental vision – and the best that he could come up with was that they should "comply with all the many rules and regulations that government agencies seemed to love to send our way." Then, "as if by pure serendipity," Paul Hawken's book, The Ecology of Commerce, landed on Ray's desk – and triggered an intense personal crisis.

Suddenly realizing that mankind is headed into ecological overshoot, he often described the moment he got the message as "an epiphany, a rude awakening, an eye-opening experience, and the point of the story felt just like the point of a spear driven straight into my heart."

Anderson was honored in 2001 as the seventh recipient of the $100,000 Mitchell Prize, Mitchell and his wife Cynthia had established the prize in 1974, eight years before HARC’s founding, to recognize outstanding contributions to sustainable development.

The 2001 prize was given to an "individual in the corporate setting or an individual who has made corporate sustainable development activities possible." In association with that theme, HARC organized the Woodlands Conference, a two-day colloquium that explored the changes, capabilities and tools needed to help corporations achieve sustainability.

"Ray Anderson is a pioneer in using innovative approaches to change past practices and to eliminate waste," Mitchell said at the time. "His vision of how sustainable technology can be used as a core principle in doing business is exemplary."

The Mitchell Prize selection committee, organized by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), cited Anderson for his pioneering vision, his leadership in striving to achieve sustainability in his company, his passion in challenging others to achieve sustainability worldwide and his humanity.

"No corporate leader in the United States has done more to set an example that moves us into the world of the future, where new models of operating sustainably must become the standard," said Bruce Alberts, NAS president at the time.

Anderson became chairman, president and CEO of Interface, Inc., in 1973. After reading Hawken's book and Daniel Quinn's novel Ishmael in 1994, he became aware of the detrimental impact that industry, and even his own company, were having on world resources. He soon instituted an innovative program to transform Interface – first by making it a "sustainable" company in all practices and eventually to make it a "restorative" company – one that returns to the earth more than it takes.

In the six years prior to his selection as recipient of the Mitchell Prize, Interface undertook more than 400 sustainability initiatives, including the design of new carpets and fabrics that were 100 percent recyclable at the end of their use and the development of the first "climate-neutral" floor covering product, Solenium. Fortune Magazine, dubbing Anderson the "Green CEO" in 1999, singled him out for his conversion to "environmentalism" and subsequent accomplishments.

Anderson's book, Mid-Course Correction: Toward a Sustainable Enterprise: The Interface Model, outlined the steps his firm took to develop new business models that safeguard the environment. Before being honored with the Mitchell Prize, he served as co-chair of the President's Council on Sustainable Development and received the 1996 Global Green USA Millennium Award for Corporate Environmental Leadership as well as the 1996 Georgia Conservancy Distinguished Conservationist Award.

The last Mitchell Prize recipient before Anderson was Dr. Marcello de Andrade, a Brazilian physician credited with teaming corporations and local stakeholders to fight the destruction of the Brazilian Amazon forest. He received the prize in 1997.

TCN: By 7-1 margin, Texans back investment in renewable energy in new poll
Texas Climate News
By 7-1 margin, Texans back investment in renewable energy in new poll
June 17, 2011 by Bill Dawson - It apparently didn’t matter to the Texas Legislature this year, but Texans evidently really like the idea of putting more money into renewable energy. State lawmakers failed again in the 2011 regular session, just as they did in 2009, to pass legislation with bipartisan support that would have boosted solar power in the state. But at the same time the solar proposal’s fate was being sealed in the waning days of the regular legislative session – the final week of May – Texans were voicing overwhelming support for policies to advance solar and wind energy in the 2011 Texas Lyceum poll...
[continued]

Land use and contamination in the Gulf Coast aquifer

An analysis of the relationship between land use and arsenic, vanadium, nitrate and boron contamination in the Gulf Coast aquifer of TexaHARC's Stephanie Glenn and Jim Lester have published an analysis of the Gulf Coast aquifer in Journal of Hydrology looking at data for arsenic, vanadium, nitrate, and boron contamination in water samples from 1270 wells taken between1990 and 2006.

"An analysis of the relationship between land use and arsenic, vanadium, nitrate and boron contamination in the Gulf Coast aquifer of Texas," Stephanie M. Glenn and L. James Lester, Journal of Hydrology, Volume 389, Issues 1-2, 28 July 2010, Pages 214-226.




New Awards

Storm Risk Calculator Project Extension
Sponsor: Rice University
Period of Support: continuation through 9/30/12
Area of Focus: Ecosystems and Water/Environmental Health  
PI: Birnur Buzcu Guven
Support Team: Pam Gallagher, Victoria Henry, Linda Gresak
Short Project Description: Continuation of the Storm Risk Calculator Project that has been underway since June 2010.

Port of Galveston Solar Project
Sponsor: DOE/Port of Galveston
Period of Support: 9/26/11 - 12/31/12
Area of Focus: Clean Energy   
PI: Rich Haut/Liz Price
Support Team: Ginny Jahn, Bob Travis, Linda GresakShort Project Description: Will evaluate potential solar technology application at the Port of Galveston to determine the minimum terminal power needs then perform engineering, design and installation of a prototype system that can be tested to assist in a large scale installation.

Yates High School CAMERA Program (Collective Action to Mobilize against Environmental RAcism)
Sponsor: EPA
Period of Support: 10/01/11 - 9/30/12
Area of Focus: Other 
PI: Amy Webb
Support Team: Ginny Jahn, Victoria Henry, Linda Gresak
Short Project Description: This proposal is for a collaborative project with the talented students of photography at the Third Ward’s historic Jack Yates high school, their dynamic teacher, Mr. Ray Carrington, members of the Third Ward community, and a grassroots environmental justice advocacy group, called t.e.j.a.s. The students will capture images of Third Ward environmental risks and, through various methods of community engagement, will share these pictures to engage in a community conversation about environmental justice in the Third Ward and how it has impacted health, happiness, and general quality of life.

Industrial Outreach to Promote CHP in TX and LA
Sponsor: Energy Foundation
Period of Support: 10/01/11 - 9/30/12
Area of Focus: Clean Energy
PI: Dan Bullock
Support Team:  Krishnan, Ross Tomlin, Ginny Jahn, Bob Travis, Linda GresakShort Project Description: This proposal provides essential additional support for a multi-year strategic effort to advance CHP in Texas and Louisiana. Successful implementation of this strategy will improve the market uptake of CHP technologies in industrial (and non-industrial) applications.
 

 


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