ENS480 Special Topics in Engineering and Natural Sciences:Energy...
ENS 480
Special Topics in Engineering and Natural Sciences
Energy: Supply Chain, Economics and Geopolitics
Course Syllabus
Fall 2012-2013
Course Description
This introductory course on “energy” is composed of two parts. The first part (taught by Dr. Kaya and Dr. Şahin) considers the supply and distribution of energy and electricity, as well as the relevant market and decision processes. The second part (taught by Dr. Evin) focuses on energy geopolitics. The course aims to provide a big-picture view of energy supply chains to help students understand the interdependencies between technology, business, economics, environment and international politics regarding energy-related issues.
Note that scientific and technological aspects of energy, which are covered in the FENS elective courses ENS 207 and ENS 315, are not at the core of this course.
Instructors
Dr. Ahmet Evin FASS 2105, aevin@sabanciuniv.edu
Dr. Murat Kaya FENS G020, mkaya@sabanciuniv.edu
Dr. Güvenç Şahin FENS 1108, guvencs@sabanciuniv.edu
Teaching Assistants
To be announced
Course Schedule
Tue, 13:40-16:30, FENS G032
Prerequisites
None
Textbook and Reading Material
There is no main textbook for the course. Instead, we will use various reading material including book chapters, white papers and reports. Below, we list a number of sample reading material and resources. Additional readings will be posted at SUCourse from time to time.
- Sustainable energy without the hot air. D. J. MacKay. Free pdf book available athttp://www.withouthotair.com/
- The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power. D. Yergin. 2009.
- Decision Making under Uncertainty in Electricity Markets. A. J. Conejo, M. Carrion, J. M. Morales. Springer, 2010.
- IEA World Energy Outlook Report
- http://www.worldenergyoutlook.org/
- US Energy Information Administration
- http://www.eia.gov/
- Note on Energy. Stanford Graduate School of Business, 2008.
- The Global Politics of Energy. Campbell and Price.
- EIA (DOE) International Energy Outlook 2010http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/pdf/0484%282010%29.pdf
- ExxonMobil “The Outlook for Energy A View to 2030”http://www.exxonmobil.com/corporate/files/news_pub_eo_2009.pdf
- Royal Dutch Shell “Shell energy scenarios to 2050” http://www-static.shell.com/static/public/downloads/brochures/corporate_pkg/scenarios/shell_energy_scenarios_2050.pdf
- Ahmet O. Evin, Energy and Turkey’s Neighborhood: Post Soviet Transformations and Transatlantic Interests
Tentative Course Outline
Week # |
Date |
Topics |
1 |
Sep 25th |
Introduction & Energy fundamentals
|
2 |
Oct 2nd |
Energy demand (Dr. Şahin)
|
3-4 |
Oct 9th-16th |
Energy supply (Dr. Kaya)
|
5 |
Oct 30th |
Electricity (Dr. Şahin)
|
6 |
Nov 6th |
Electricity markets (Dr. Şahin)
|
7 |
Nov 13th |
Oil and natural gas in detail (Dr. Kaya)
|
8 |
Nov 20th |
Energy security (Dr. Evin) |
9 |
Nov 27th |
Turkey & Its neighbors (Dr. Evin)
|
10 |
Dec 4th |
Turkey & Its neighbors (Dr. Evin)
|
11 |
Dec 11th |
EU energy policies (Dr. Evin) |
12 |
Dec 18th |
Energy policies and regulatory environment in Turkey (Dr. Evin) |
13 |
Dec 25th |
Energy industry in Turkey (Panel with guest speakers)
|
Grading
Assignments |
14% |
Quizzes |
14% |
Midterm Exam-1 Midterm Exam-2 |
22% 22% |
Final Exam (comprehensive) |
28% |
Notes on Grading
- Written assignments may require reading assigned material and conducting web research.
- Late assignment submissions are not accepted.
- Assignments should be prepared in handwriting; typewritten printed material and/or submissions through e-mails are not accepted.
- The lowest graded assignment for each student will be dropped from consideration.
- Quizzes will not be announced in advance; they may be related to the assignment material or topics covered on the same day.
- The lowest graded quiz for each student will be dropped from consideration.
Attendance Policy
- Attendance to lectures is mandatory and will be recorded through quiz attendance.
- Attendance records start with the first lecture. This is also the case for students who “add” the course during the add-drop period.
- The attendance policy is as follows (a lecture is defined as the three-hour class meeting):
- missing up to 2 lectures: OK, no need for explanation
- missing 3 or more lectures: direct effect on course grade
- missing a high number of lectures: failure in the course
- Please email the TAs if you will miss (or have missed) a class session with a valid reason. The TAs will keep track of the attendance records.
Make-up Examination Policy
- There will be a single make-up exam that will be conducted after the final exam. Any student who misses the midterms or the final exam will take this exam.
- Subject coverage will be the same as the final exam.
- A student who wants to take the make-up exam needs to document the reason to miss the regular exam (such as sickness or official appointment) and inform the instructors immediately before/after missing the regular exam.
Other Notes
- The instructors may have to make modifications in the syllabus due to unforeseen reasons. Students are responsible for such modifications that will be announced in lectures and/or in SuCourse.
- There will not be any “extra” opportunity, e.g. an extra project work or assignment, to increase an individual student’s course grade.
- Students are responsible from all quizzes and assignments even if they enroll in the course during the add-drop period.