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The CSIS Energy and National Security Program and the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) are pleased to co-sponsor an event addressing fugitive methane emissions across the natural gas value chain. The U.S. unconventional oil and gas revolution that reversed decades-old trends of fossil fuel production declines in the U.S. has had ripple effects globally. Expansion of natural gas resources and production has inspired a rigorous environmental debate about the regulation of these new resources. As the primary component of natural gas and a potent green house gas, the regulation of fugitive methane emissions has moved to the forefront of national regulatory debates. In order to address these issues, the event will feature two panels: one addressing the science around the significance of methane as a potent greenhouse gas and the second looking at what is being done by government and industry (upstream and downstream) to reduce emissions and leakage.
Programs
ENERGY AND NATIONAL SECURITY
Topics
ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, MARKETS AND TRENDS, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, SECURITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, REGIONAL ANALYSIS
The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) hosted an event with keynote speaker General Keith Alexander, Director of the NSA, Commander of U.S. Cyber Command. General Alexander spoke about cyber security and USCYBERCOM.
This event was made possible by support from AT&T
For more information visit csis.org/event/cybersecurity-discussion-general-keith-b-a...
n January 2014 the CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program launched the Eurasia Initiative. The first fruits of this project include a series of reports on Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia. The decision to initiate these activities with Central Asia stemmed from a concern that the drawdown of U.S. and allied troops from Afghanistan would augur declining U.S. interest. For U.S. policymakers, turning away from Central Asia now would be a serious miscalculation. The five states of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) are located at the heart of the Eurasian landmass, in close proximity to four of Washington’s biggest foreign policy challenges: Afghanistan/Pakistan, Iran, Russia, and China. For that reason alone, the United States has a strong interest in developing economic and security ties with the states of Central Asia, and doing so in a way that is no longer driven by the exigencies of the war in Afghanistan, but is responsive to the needs and interests of the region itself, as well as enduring U.S. interests.
Opening remarks by:
John Hamre
President and CEO, Pritzker Chair
CSIS
Keynote speech by:
Nisha Biswal
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Panel discussion by:
William Courtney
Adjunct Senior Fellow, RAND Corporation
Edward Chow
Senior Fellow, CSIS Energy and National Security Program
Andrew Kuchins
Director and Senior Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Michael Lally
Executive Deputy Assistant Secretary for Europe, Middle East and Africa
U.S. Department of Commerce
Martha Olcott
Senior Non-resident Association
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Moderated by:
Jeffrey Mankoff
Deputy Director and Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Programs
EURASIA INITIATIVE, RUSSIA AND EURASIA PROGRAM
Topics
DEFENSE AND SECURITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS
Regions
AFGHANISTAN, ASIA, CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA, CHINA, EUROPE, INDIA, IRAN, KOREA, MIDDLE EAST, NORTH AMERICA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA AND EURASIA, TURKEY
My favorite TV shows have been Fastlane, 24 and CSI. Nothing beats the beauty of CSI in HDTV. You gotta love Jerry Bruckheimer, the EP, and his team of cinematographers and HDTV shaders who make Florida's rainbow of colors pop on the screen. McG still has my heart for his "camera effects" in Fastlane but CSI is an eyegasm in HD.
There is a reason behind my capturing and uploading this photo. Only HDTV could reveal the effect. Can you see what is unique about her face?
I am kind of in love with CSI pinball. Isn't the crime scene tape at the flippers so clever?
The object of CSI pinball is to collect all the evidence to solve a case and there are little skulls and microscopes, etc. scattered throughout the machine. I don't think I got a single piece of evidence the one time I played, but Patrick almost solved a whole case, I think. He did so well he earned a replay.
This machine also talked a lot, saying weird things like "suspect shakedown" in Gil Grissom's voice.
Some evidence on the work bench, I really should find something less strange to fill my spare time with. I suppose it's more interesting than a jigsaw!
n January 2014 the CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program launched the Eurasia Initiative. The first fruits of this project include a series of reports on Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia. The decision to initiate these activities with Central Asia stemmed from a concern that the drawdown of U.S. and allied troops from Afghanistan would augur declining U.S. interest. For U.S. policymakers, turning away from Central Asia now would be a serious miscalculation. The five states of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) are located at the heart of the Eurasian landmass, in close proximity to four of Washington’s biggest foreign policy challenges: Afghanistan/Pakistan, Iran, Russia, and China. For that reason alone, the United States has a strong interest in developing economic and security ties with the states of Central Asia, and doing so in a way that is no longer driven by the exigencies of the war in Afghanistan, but is responsive to the needs and interests of the region itself, as well as enduring U.S. interests.
Opening remarks by:
John Hamre
President and CEO, Pritzker Chair
CSIS
Keynote speech by:
Nisha Biswal
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Panel discussion by:
William Courtney
Adjunct Senior Fellow, RAND Corporation
Edward Chow
Senior Fellow, CSIS Energy and National Security Program
Andrew Kuchins
Director and Senior Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Michael Lally
Executive Deputy Assistant Secretary for Europe, Middle East and Africa
U.S. Department of Commerce
Martha Olcott
Senior Non-resident Association
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Moderated by:
Jeffrey Mankoff
Deputy Director and Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Programs
EURASIA INITIATIVE, RUSSIA AND EURASIA PROGRAM
Topics
DEFENSE AND SECURITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS
Regions
AFGHANISTAN, ASIA, CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA, CHINA, EUROPE, INDIA, IRAN, KOREA, MIDDLE EAST, NORTH AMERICA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA AND EURASIA, TURKEY
CSIS hosted a Congressional Dialogue event with members of the House and Senate Armed Services Committees. They were: Senator Mark Udall (D-CO); Senator Roger Wicker (R-MS); Rep. Mac Thornberry (R-TX); and Rep. Jim Marshall (D-GA). Ray DuBois, a senior adviser at CSIS, provided the introduction. Maren Leed, a senior fellow with the CSIS International Security Program, moderated the event.
The CSIS Energy and National Security Program and the Rhodium Group discussed the findings from their new report, Remaking American Power: Potential Energy Market Impacts of EPA’s Proposed GHG Emission Performance Standards for Existing Electric Power Plants. The report seeks to inform federal and state policymakers, energy producers, investors and consumers about the potential energy market impacts of state and federal policy decisions associated with the Clean Power Plan as proposed. John Larsen, Senior Analyst with the Rhodium Group, and Trevor Houser, Partner with the Rhodium Group, presented the findings, followed by comments from a panel featuring Richard Duke, Deputy Director for the White House Office of Energy and Climate Change, Erica Bowman, Vice President for Research & Policy Analysis at America's Natural Gas Alliance (ANGA) and Kathryn Zyla, Deputy Director of the Georgetown Climate Center. Sarah O. Ladislaw, Director and Senior Fellow in the CSIS Energy and National Security program, provided introductory remarks and moderated.
Programs
ENERGY AND NATIONAL SECURITY, REMAKING AMERICAN POWER
Topics
ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, MARKETS AND TRENDS, ALTERNATIVE ENERGY, SECURITY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, REGIONAL ANALYSIS
Regions
AMERICAS
n January 2014 the CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program launched the Eurasia Initiative. The first fruits of this project include a series of reports on Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia. The decision to initiate these activities with Central Asia stemmed from a concern that the drawdown of U.S. and allied troops from Afghanistan would augur declining U.S. interest. For U.S. policymakers, turning away from Central Asia now would be a serious miscalculation. The five states of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) are located at the heart of the Eurasian landmass, in close proximity to four of Washington’s biggest foreign policy challenges: Afghanistan/Pakistan, Iran, Russia, and China. For that reason alone, the United States has a strong interest in developing economic and security ties with the states of Central Asia, and doing so in a way that is no longer driven by the exigencies of the war in Afghanistan, but is responsive to the needs and interests of the region itself, as well as enduring U.S. interests.
Opening remarks by:
John Hamre
President and CEO, Pritzker Chair
CSIS
Keynote speech by:
Nisha Biswal
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Panel discussion by:
William Courtney
Adjunct Senior Fellow, RAND Corporation
Edward Chow
Senior Fellow, CSIS Energy and National Security Program
Andrew Kuchins
Director and Senior Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Michael Lally
Executive Deputy Assistant Secretary for Europe, Middle East and Africa
U.S. Department of Commerce
Martha Olcott
Senior Non-resident Association
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Moderated by:
Jeffrey Mankoff
Deputy Director and Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Programs
EURASIA INITIATIVE, RUSSIA AND EURASIA PROGRAM
Topics
DEFENSE AND SECURITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS
Regions
AFGHANISTAN, ASIA, CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA, CHINA, EUROPE, INDIA, IRAN, KOREA, MIDDLE EAST, NORTH AMERICA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA AND EURASIA, TURKEY
n January 2014 the CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program launched the Eurasia Initiative. The first fruits of this project include a series of reports on Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia. The decision to initiate these activities with Central Asia stemmed from a concern that the drawdown of U.S. and allied troops from Afghanistan would augur declining U.S. interest. For U.S. policymakers, turning away from Central Asia now would be a serious miscalculation. The five states of Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) are located at the heart of the Eurasian landmass, in close proximity to four of Washington’s biggest foreign policy challenges: Afghanistan/Pakistan, Iran, Russia, and China. For that reason alone, the United States has a strong interest in developing economic and security ties with the states of Central Asia, and doing so in a way that is no longer driven by the exigencies of the war in Afghanistan, but is responsive to the needs and interests of the region itself, as well as enduring U.S. interests.
Opening remarks by:
John Hamre
President and CEO, Pritzker Chair
CSIS
Keynote speech by:
Nisha Biswal
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Panel discussion by:
William Courtney
Adjunct Senior Fellow, RAND Corporation
Edward Chow
Senior Fellow, CSIS Energy and National Security Program
Andrew Kuchins
Director and Senior Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Michael Lally
Executive Deputy Assistant Secretary for Europe, Middle East and Africa
U.S. Department of Commerce
Martha Olcott
Senior Non-resident Association
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Moderated by:
Jeffrey Mankoff
Deputy Director and Fellow
CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program
Programs
EURASIA INITIATIVE, RUSSIA AND EURASIA PROGRAM
Topics
DEFENSE AND SECURITY, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND RECONSTRUCTION, ENERGY AND CLIMATE CHANGE, TRADE AND ECONOMICS
Regions
AFGHANISTAN, ASIA, CAUCASUS, CENTRAL ASIA, CHINA, EUROPE, INDIA, IRAN, KOREA, MIDDLE EAST, NORTH AMERICA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA AND EURASIA, TURKEY
CSI Miami dvd (Crime Scene Investigation: Miami) is an American police procedural television series, which premiered on September 23, 2002 on CBS. The series is a spin-off of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation.
Know CSI Miami dvd release date at collectcheaps.com
Criminal Justice students at Carl Sandburg College work a mock crime scene on Friday, Sept. 21 at Lake Bracken. The students executed a variety of field activities including interviews, collecting and documenting evidence, making arrests and helping a victim. Learn more what Sandburg can offer you through criminal justice by visiting www.sandburg.edu/academics/criminal-justice