ACEP Welcomes Steve Colt to the Team

ACEP Welcomes Steve Colt to the Team

Steve Colt comes to ACEP after 34 years in Alaska as a professor of economics at UAAā€™s and at .

He holds B.A. and Ph.D. degrees in economics from and , respectively, and served as ISER director from 2007 to 2010.

Coltā€™s research has focused on energy systems, sustainable utilities, tourism and climate change in the North. While still in college, he developed an integrated ā€œleast-costā€ model of energy use and supply for Berkshire County, Massachusetts. His first job, in 1984, was evaluating independent power producer contracts for the California Public Utilities Commission. Colt led Alaskaā€™s first major end-use electricity demand study in 1987 and has worked with teams of engineers and scientists and with local people on both regional and community energy assessments. He recently completed a village energy planning model tailored to small Alaska communities, and he is particularly interested in understanding heat and transportation energy use so that cost-effective integrated systems can be successfully developed for remote isolated communities in ā€” and beyond ā€” Alaska.

At ACEP, Colt will work on the energy economics and policy task of an -funded project. He is particularly interested in what he calls ā€œsmart pricing for smart gridsā€ ā€” the use of prices and incentives to help guide consumers, utilities, and investors toward cost-effective and innovative energy infrastructure and use.

ā€œPrice signals can be very powerful tools, so we ought to think hard about how and where to use them effectively,ā€ Colt said.

He is also hoping to focus on the economic potential for integrating small electric vehicles into Alaskaā€™s microgrids, saying that, ā€œThere is no better place than ACEP for examining the opportunities and challenges of EVā€™s in Alaska!ā€

Colt will be based in Anchorage at UAAā€™s , a longtime ACEP partner. When not working, he enjoys skiing, running and singing.

 

Steve Colt joins ACEP after 34 years at ISER. Photo by Amanda Byrd.