UM Study

U-M study: Local Renewable Energy Employment Can Fully Replace U.S. Coal Jobs Nationwide

ANN ARBOR - Across the United States, local wind and solar jobs can fully replace the coal-plant jobs that will be lost as the nation's power-generation system moves away from fossil fuels in the coming decades, according to a new University of Michigan study. As of 2019, coal-fired electricity generation directly employed nearly 80,000 workers

By |2022-08-25T11:46:10-04:00August 23rd, 2022|Climate Change, Industry 4.0|

UM Report: Lockdowns During Early Pandemic Saved Lives, But Not Go-To Strategy Moving Forward

ANN ARBOR—The U.S. pandemic lockdown in 2020 caused a $2.3 trillion economic downturn and split the nation politically, and now some European nations are locking down again as Omicron surges through the global population. But do these drastic measures save lives? Are they worth massive job and income losses? A new University of Michigan-led study

By |2022-01-21T11:37:13-05:00January 21st, 2022|Coronavirus, Science|

Study: Protein In Brain Uses Energy Status To Influence Maturation, Body Size

ANN ARBOR - Scientists have identified how a protein in the brain uses information about the body’s energy balance to regulate growth rate and the onset of puberty in children. The research, published Nov. 3 in the journal Nature(link is external), centered on the melanocortin 3 receptor (MC3R), a member of a family of proteins that

By |2021-11-08T13:03:13-05:00November 8th, 2021|Life Sciences, Life Sciences/Biotech|

UM Study: Investing In Energy Storage For Solar, Wind Power Could Greatly Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions

ANN ARBOR—Drive through nearly any corner of America long enough and giant solar farms or rows of wind turbines come into view, all with the goal of increasing the country’s renewable energy use and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. But what some may not realize is at times these renewable energy sources can produce more power

By |2019-07-30T16:40:55-04:00July 30th, 2019|Clean Update|

UM Study: Self-Driving Cars May Induce People To Travel More, Negating Green Benefits

ANN ARBOR—The benefits of self-driving cars will likely induce vehicle owners to drive more, and those extra miles could partially or completely offset the potential energy-saving benefits that automation may provide, according to a new University of Michigan study. In the coming years, self-driving cars are expected to yield significant improvements in safety, traffic flow

By |2019-04-17T17:56:22-04:00April 17th, 2019|Auto Tech, Autonomous Vehicles|