Noah Kaufman
Senior Research Scholar in the Faculty of International and Public Affairs; Adjunct Professor of International and Public Affairs
Personal Details
Dr. Noah Kaufman joined the Columbia SIPA Center on Global Energy Policy (CGEP) as a research scholar in January 2018. Noah works on climate and clean energy policies and directs CGEP’s Carbon Tax Research Initiative.
At World Resource Institute, Noah led projects on carbon pricing, the economic impacts of climate policies, and long-term decarbonization strategies. Under President Obama, he served as the Deputy Associate Director of Energy & Climate Change at the White House Council on Environmental Quality. Previously, he was a Senior Consultant in the Environment Practice of NERA Economic Consulting.
Noah received his BS in economics, cum laude, from Duke University, and his PhD and MS in economics from the University of Texas at Austin, where his dissertation examined optimal policy responses to climate change.
He has published peer-reviewed journal articles on the social cost of carbon dioxide emissions and the role of risk aversion in environmental policy evaluations, among other topics.
Education
- PhD in economics, University of Texas at Austin
- MS in economics, University of Texas at Austin
- BS in economics, cum laude, Duke University
In The Media
The former Federal Reserve chair isn’t the candidate climate activists wanted, but her record gives them a lot to be optimistic and hopeful about. Noah Kaufman comments.
Can ambitious climate plans from Beijing to California keep global warming to a minimum? Noah Kaufman comments.
Both parties used to love the carbon tax, so why are they giving up on it? Noah Kaufman comments.
Lawmakers taking climate change seriously have stopped the worst-case climate scenario. But while the climate has been slightly ameliorated thanks to increased usage of energy alternatives, the risk of rising CO2s has not changed.
Although Republicans seem to be pushing more innovative policies under the idea of a climate strategy, Noah Kaufman writes in The Hill that innovation does not mean combating climate change. "The US needs policies aimed at producing a carbon-neutral economy."