Newswise — New York Institute of Technology’s annual energy conference will feature noted climate science expert Dr. James E. Hansen and numerous public and private specialists on panels that explore key energy issues.

“Tipping Points: Energy, Water, Climate” will be held June 10, 2015 from 8:30 a.m. - 3 p.m. at NYIT de Seversky Mansion in Old Westbury, N.Y. To register, visit nyit.edu/conferences/energy_conference/

NYIT President Edward Guiliano, Ph.D., will open the School of Engineering and Computing Sciences event, which celebrates its tenth anniversary of showcasing energy experts, presenting research, and introducing new approaches to sustainability.

"In the past three decades it has become manifestly, abundantly clear that global warming and significant climate change are here and now; simple unequivocal facts, no longer the stuff of science fiction, or of uneasy environmentalism,” said conference co-organizer and Associate Professor Larry Silverstein, Ph.D. “Established science tells us that we are faced with clear hard choices. Technology gives us hope that we may convert those choices into practical affordable remedies, if we begin right now. We have no more time left to debate or dither, as climate science pioneer Jim Hansen has expressed so eloquently."

NYIT will present a “Champion of Climate Change Awareness” Award to Hansen, director of climate science, awareness, and solutions at Columbia University’s Earth Institute.

As part of a session on climate change, Justin Gillis, the New York Times principal environmental science writer and editor, will interview Hansen about his life as a climate scientist. Two panelists, Michaela Labriole of the New York Hall of Science and Daniel Bader of the Columbia University Center for Climate Systems Research, will present on the connection between climate change and personal passions.

The panel session on water features Christopher Schubert of the USGS New York Water Science Center and John Rhyner of P.W. Grosser Consulting. Schubert will discuss how saltwater and drought pose threats to groundwater. Rhyner’s presentation focuses on using Long Island’s aquifers for heating and cooling buildings with geothermal systems. The final session on energy includes presentations on the 21st-century power grid, clean energy, and flexibility in energy by Dr. Jian Sun of the Center for Future Energy Systems at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Micah Kotch of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, and Julia Bovey of the New York State Department of Public Service.