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Jim Williams
Jim Williams is a senior consultant at Energy and Environmental Economics, Inc. of San Francisco, and a lecturer in U.C. Berkeley's Energy and Resources Group, where he teaches quantitative methods in environmental science. He received his Ph.D. from U.C. Berkeley in 1995, and has a background in physics, electrical engineering, China studies, and history of science. Jim¡¯s research concerns the political economy of energy in Asia and the U.S. In his consulting work in California¡¯s electric power sector, Jim specializes in rate design, energy modeling, transmission pricing, and demand response. In past lives, he has led an NGO team that installed a wind power system in a North Korean village, directed the Native American Renewable Energy Education Project, worked as an oil exploration field engineer, and founded a college clean energy organization. Publications include ¡°Electricity Reform in Developing Countries: A Reappraisal,¡± Energy ¨C the International Journal (2006); "The Political Economy of Electricity Reform in Asia," Pacific Affairs 77:3 (2004); ¡°Fuel and Famine: Rural Energy Crisis in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea,¡± Asian Perspective, 26:1 (2002); and ¡°Fang Lizhi's Big Bang: A Physicist and the State in China,¡± Historical Studies in the Physical and Biological Sciences, 30:1 (1999).
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