Rutgers Launches Climate and Energy Institute With Wide-Reaching Goals

October 5, 2023

Institute will combine and unify the strengths of three existing institutes on climate, environment and energy research

Financial support for the new institute will include $2.5 million from the Chancellor Challenge which will be awarded over three years, and dedicated funding from the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences. Additional support will be provided by Rutgers–New Brunswick schools, including the School of Engineering, School of Arts and Sciences, Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, and Mason Gross School of the Arts.

University leaders are creating an institute designed to elevate the local, national and international profile of Rutgers–New Brunswick as a locus for scholarship on climate change, renewable energy production, energy conservation and their environmental dimensions.

The Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute (RCEI) will combine and expand upon the activities of three existing institutes on climate, environment and energy research at the university: the Rutgers Climate Institute (RCI), the Rutgers Energy Institute (REI) and the Rutgers Institute of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences (EOAS).

The launch of RCEI, an initiative of the Rutgers–New Brunswick Academic Master Plan, is expected to maximize the university’s impact on finding solutions to the existential challenge of climate change.

Rutgers–New Brunswick Chancellor Francine Conway

Rutgers–New Brunswick Chancellor Francine Conway views the new Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute as vital to “our work to redefine excellence in higher education.”

“Rutgers–New Brunswick has long been known as a center of excellence for climate and energy research,” Rutgers–New Brunswick Chancellor Francine Conway said. “The new Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute will focus and expand upon existing resources to help build a resilient, equitable and sustainable climate future. It is part of our work to redefine excellence in higher education.”

Conway noted that the directors of the existing institutes will serve in leadership or advisory board positions at the new institute, and more than 150 faculty members are expected to affiliate with RCEI.

Julie Lockwood, a professor in the Department of Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources in the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, will be the interim director.

Rutgers Professor Julie Lockwood

Rutgers Professor Julie Lockwood, a leader in the study of biodiversity, including its relationship with climate change and energy production, will be the interim director of the new Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute.

“The formation of RCEI brings together scholars working on the social and physical dimensions of climate change, low carbon energy transitions, and climate and energy communication,” said Lockwood, a leader in the study of biodiversity, including its relationship with climate change and energy production. “It also creates physical and virtual spaces for faculty, staff, students and stakeholders to collaborate and innovate across these areas.”

Lockwood will be charged with hiring and supervising the core RCEI staff, creating the institute’s organizational structure with input from the RCEI leadership team, engaging with RCEI affiliates and others throughout Rutgers to identify synergies in mission, as well as initiating RCEI funding and grant operations.

The institute will have offices within the New Jersey Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health (IFNH) building on the George H. Cook campus but will maintain the model of a distributed institute with affiliated faculty and staff located at sites throughout Rutgers–New Brunswick.

Photo of marsh near Little Egg Harbor, NJ with snowy egrets.

The new center will support Rutgers research on how climate change is affecting coastal wildlife, such as this sedge of egrets living on pristine marshland in the Great Bay Boulevard Wildlife Management Area in Little Egg Harbor, N.J., and coastal communities, such as neighborhoods on Mystic Island (in background).
Matthew Drews/Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute

RCEI, with an ambitious and wide-ranging mission, will provide a focal point for climate change and energy scholarship at Rutgers–New Brunswick, enabling university investments to be directed toward their greatest effect, Lockwood said.

The combined structure also will open new avenues for the pursuit of large-scale, externally funded projects and allow philanthropic supporters to more easily identify where their interests and goals will be amplified, she added. The new institute will collaborate with the Rutgers Office of Climate Action and other units across Rutgers that engage with climate and energy science.

RCEI will include staff who supported RCI, REI and EOAS. In addition, faculty and staff who were affiliates of RCI, REI and EOAS will be invited to affiliate with the new institute.

The university will begin the initial rollout of the institute this month, with select programs to be up and running within the current academic year. All planned activities will be fully operational by the summer of 2024. Once the initial rollout is under way, the activities of RCI, REI and EOAS will be incorporated into the new institute. By summer 2024, all operations will be under RCEI. The effort is led by Senior Vice Provost for Research Denise Hien.

Solar array

The new center will support Rutgers research on how climate change is affecting coastal wildlife, such as this sedge of egrets living on pristine marshland in the Great Bay Boulevard Wildlife Management Area in Little Egg Harbor, N.J., and coastal communities, such as neighborhoods on Mystic Island (in background). Matthew Drews/Rutgers Climate and Energy Institute

Financial support for RCEI will include $2.5 million from the Chancellor Challenge which will be awarded over three years, and dedicated funding from the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences. Additional support will be provided by Rutgers–New Brunswick schools, including the School of Engineering, School of Arts and Sciences, Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, and Mason Gross School of the Arts. The schools’ faculty will serve in RCEI leadership roles and enhance RCEI programs. This coming together of multiple schools and divisions will expand the resources available to the institute. RCEI’s funding sources are expected to further diversify as it moves from inception to full operation.

A search for a permanent director will be launched in 2024.

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