Deborah Gordon
Senior Fellow in International and Public Affairs
Senior Principal, Climate Intelligence Program, RMI
Areas of Interest: Energy innovation, climate policy, oil and gas sector, science and technology
Deborah Gordon is the Senior Principal in the Climate Intelligence Program at RMI. She formerly served as Director of the Energy and Climate Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She is the author of several books, including No Standard Oil: Managing Abundant Petroleum in a Warming World, Oxford University Press, 2021. After beginning her career with Chevron, Gordon managed an energy and environmental consulting practice, taught at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, and directed the Energy Policy Program at the Union of Concerned Scientists. Gordon regularly testifies before Congress, collaborates with government agencies, industry, and NGOs, and has served on National Academy of Sciences committees. Gordon’s op eds, articles, and quotes have appeared in The National Interest, The Hill, Pacific Standard, Financial Times, Scientific American, International Economy Magazine, About Oil, Boao Review, Xinghua News, Huffington Post, Newsweek, Time, Washington Post, and New York Times. She has been featured on ABC News, PBS Great Decisions, NPR’s To the Point, E&E TV's On Point.
Serving as Principal Investigator on the Oil Climate Project, a research initiative aimed at developing new knowledge and indicators using a novel systems approach so that stakeholders can make more strategic and sustainable environmental decisions throughout the petroleum sector
Researching global opportunities to reduce climate impacts in the petroleum sector and expanding the Oil Climate Index Plus Gas (OCI+), a first-of-its-kind analytic tool to assess and compare the lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions throughout the oil and gas supply chain
Writing a new book, There Is No Standard Oil, based on extensive research findings from the Oil Climate Project, under contract at Oxford University Press with expected publication in 2021
Collaborating with NASA’s Carbon Monitoring System scientists to assess methane emission impacts from global oil and gas operations
Conducting research on the impacts vehicle electrification will have on the oil transition strategy in order to advance a low-carbon economy
Investigating carbon and methane pricing that fairly assess fees across the oil and gas supply chain
Independent study courses offered.
Why Are California’s Oil’s Some of the World’s Dirtiest? A Panel with the Oil Climate Index Team,” Stanford University, Bill Lane Center for the American West, April 15, 2019, https://west.stanford.edu/events/why-are-california-s-oils-some-world-s-dirtiest-panel-oil-climate-index-team; Event recording: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1w5tDcNtaNtAgpFOqw8_AnBprNOMTc7k8/view
“Carbon Bubbles and Climate Futures,” America’s Climate Change Future, Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, February 1, 2019, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=slI9z0rxCBA&feature=youtu.be
The Oil Climate Index: Analyzing the Heterogeneous Lifecycle Greenhouse Gas Impacts of Global Oils, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, December 3, 2018, https://projects.iq.harvard.edu/energyconsortium/event/oil-climate-index-analyzing-heterogeneous-lifecycle-greenhouse-gas-impact
Introducing the Oil Climate Index: Applying NASA’s Satellite Data to Fill Gaps in Resource Decision-making, NASA Goddard Carbon Monitoring Systems, September 6, 2018, https://carbon.nasa.gov/policy_speaker_09062018.html
Carnegie Podcast: The Oil Climate Index, November 2018, https://youtu.be/eR0fIv_I4B8
Carnegie Diplopod: The World of Oil, October 2016, https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/diplopod/id1161512268?mt=2