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IIASA corner
Q Your research focuses largely on transportation.
What led you to pursue research in this area?
A As a young aerospace engineering student, I began
to worry about my impact on climate change, which
I felt was the biggest challenge facing our society.
This worry, along with my experience of living in
poorly planned, automobile-dependent cities in
North America, helped me see that new technology
was not a silver bullet for social problems.
Transportation is a particularly tough area for
sustainability, because increased mobility is usually
desirable: it allows people to access work, leisure,
education, health care, and more. The ways we
currently travel are simply not sustainable,
especially if people across the Global South mirror
the travel habits of people from wealthy countries.
A radical transformation is required, and there are
critical choices to be made about how best to
achieve it. I see our research as helping identify
what those choices are and helping decision
makers to approach them sensibly.
Q What do you hope to accomplish with
your work at IIASA?
A The Energy Program's scientific energy systems
models are an immensely valuable resource.
I hope to keep these tools at the forefront of new
methodology, so that I and other researchers can
study important policy questions. I also hope to
develop my own connections to the many people
and institutions in IIASA's orbit and use these to
benefit and evolve the community of transport/
energy modelers. Q Who inspired you to pursue a career in research?
A Authors like Jane Jacobs, John Kenneth Galbraith,
and Herman Daly, as well as some of my professors
at the University of Toronto, helped me see that I
didn't have to educate myself towards a particular
job in one engineering discipline. Instead, I could
think more broadly about the state of the world,
and changes I envisioned, then develop and apply
a unique set of skills towards helping to bring
about that change.
My advisors at MIT, especially Professor Valerie
Karplus, taught me to see research as a continuous
journey in the company of other scholars, and to
take a long-term, strategic approach in planning
and working towards the knowledge I want to
share with others. I also owe thanks to my parents
for fostering and rewarding my curiosity from an
early age.
Q What is next for you in your career?
A After my postdoc, my goal is to join the faculty at
a Canadian university. I aim to continue my current
research, maintaining a strong relationship with my
IIASA colleagues, while getting back into teaching
engineering and science students. I want to help
undergraduate and graduate students learn to
understand and guide the economic, policy,
and social dimensions of transport, energy,
and climate issues.
Paul Kishimoto joined IIASA
as a postdoc in August 2018.
His research interests include
data, methods, and models that
can help chart the future of
transport energy use and policy.
Q&A
Paul Natsuo Kishimoto: kishimot@iiasa.at
Improving
transportation
systems to combat
climate change
Interview by: Jeremy Summers
www.iiasa.ac.at 31OptionsSummer
2019
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book options, Volume summer 2019"
options
Volume summer 2019
- Title
- options
- Volume
- summer 2019
- Location
- Laxenburg
- Date
- 2019
- Language
- English
- License
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 32
- Categories
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine