Mort Webster

Associate Professor of Energy Engineering, Penn State University
Visiting Associate Professor of Engineering Systems, MIT (Academic Year 2014-15)
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Bio

Professor Webster is interested in exploring the interface between formal quantitative models and the policy process. His research focuses on environmental and energy systems analysis and decision-making under uncertainty. His work aims to analyze the uncertainty in assessment models of environmental and energy systems to produce insights that are useful to the policy community — including addressing the role of learning in the future on today's decisions, the effect of uncertainty on multi-stakeholder negotiations, and better means of communicating results to non-experts.

Projects:

The Interface of Infrastructures, Markets, and Natural Cycles—Innovative modeling and control mechanisms for managing electricity, water and air quality in Texas
An Improved Model of Endogenous Technical Change Considering Uncertain R&D Returns and Uncertain Climate Response
Air Pollution, Health and Economic Impacts of Global Change Policy and Future Technologies: An Integrated Model Analysis

 

Education & Credentials

B.S., Computer Science Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, 1988
M.S., Technology and Policy, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1996
Ph.D., Technology Management and Policy, Engineering Systems Division, MIT, 2000
PhD Thesis: Uncertainty and Learning in Sequential Decision-Making: The Case of Climate Policy
Courses Taught:
Energy and Environmental Systems Analysis
Methods for Decision-Making under Uncertainty
Introduction to Public Policy Analysis
Policy Analysis for Global Climate Change

Recent Publications