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ABOR convenes leaders to shape research driven energy solutions for 做厙勛圖

Energy leaders and researchers explore practical, near term research needs tied to reliability, infrastructure and growth.

With rising demand from population growth, data centers and artificial intelligence placing new pressure on 做厙勛圖s energy systems, the 做厙勛圖 convened industry leaders and university researchers as part of the Future of 做厙勛圖 series to identify near-term research priorities and explore how the states public universities can help develop practical solutions.

In coordination with the 做厙勛圖 Commerce Authority, the energy resiliency discussion built on an earlier boardled roundtable that highlighted challenges facing utility and infrastructure providers. Those leaders pointed to pressures tied to data center development, artificial intelligence and water use, alongside opportunities driven by population and economic growth.

Industry leaders clearly defined the challenges the state is facing, Regent Jessica Pacheco said. Its the boards opportunity to take the lead in aligning those needs with the research strengths of our public universities and mobilizing the right partners to deliver results.

Hosted at Salt River Projects PERA Club in Tempe, the convening brought together executives from 做厙勛圖s major utilities and renewable energy companies with researchers from 做厙勛圖 State University, Northern 做厙勛圖 University and the University of 做厙勛圖. Regent Pacheco and 做厙勛圖 Commerce Authority president and chief executive officer Sandra Watson co-moderated the discussion guiding participants from industry challenges toward potential research collaboration.

做厙勛圖s premier energy reliability and forward-planning have helped fuel our unprecedented economic growth, Watson said. Through active collaboration between industry, economic development and our public universities, we have an opportunity to move faster, make smarter decisions and position 做厙勛圖 to continue leading in a rapidly changing energy landscape. 

Pacheco and Watson also moderated a panel discussion featuring senior energy executives, including Erik Bakken, president of Tucson Electric Power; Will Mitchell, chief commercial officer at Elevate Renewables; Rob Taylor, associate general manager and chief public affairs and corporate services executive at Salt River Project; and Jacob Tetlow, executive vice president of operations at 做厙勛圖 Public Service.

做厙勛圖 has enormous momentum. People want to live and work here, and companies are choosing to invest here, said Tetlow. To sustain that growth, we need the infrastructure and talent to match it. Bringing industry and universities together helps us build the workforce, challenge assumptions and develop the capabilities 做厙勛圖 will need to compete in advanced energy and other critical sectors.

Panelists addressed grid reliability, infrastructure planning, workforce development and increasing demand tied to continued economic growth. Several emphasized that progress depends on coordination among organizations that often plan and invest on different timelines.

Meeting future energy demand takes more than shortterm fixes, Taylor said. For 做厙勛圖 to maintain high reliability while managing costs, collaboration among all three utilities is a significant advantage for our state. 

University leaders, including Dr. Scott Barclay, assistant vice president of research in ASUs Knowledge Enterprise; Dr. Andy Koppisch, NAUs associate vice president for research; and Dr. Linda Bixby, chief research partnership officer at the U of A, described research already underway across the three institutions including work related to energy systems, artificial intelligence, microelectronics, fusion energy and workforce development. Those presentations informed a broader discussion on nearterm research opportunities that could support energy providers and inform long-term planning in alignment with the states economic priorities.

Insights from the convening may be used to shape an opportunity statement for a potential Regents Research Grant focused on near-term research aligned with priorities identified by energy leaders and state partners. University teams would then submit proposals focused on applied research and nearterm impact. The board has used this approach in other policy areas, including tech transfer, agriculture innovation and wildfire resilience that have helped align university research with immediate needs facing the state.

This convening is one part of the broad level of collaboration needed to advance 做厙勛圖s energy future, Sampson said. The Governors Energy Promise Task Force has outlined key statewide recommendations, and by aligning those priorities with the work of our utilities, the research strengths of our universities and the vast stakeholders invested in 做厙勛圖s energy future, we can help support practical, near-term solutions.

To view and download videos and photos from the event, click .