Jerome "Jay" Apt

Professor Emeritus Carnegie Mellon University

  • Pittsburgh PA

Jay Apt is an emeritus professor at the Tepper School of Business and in the Department of Engineering and Public Policy.

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Carnegie Mellon University

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Biography

Jay Apt is an emeritus professor at Carnegie Mellon University’s Tepper School of Business and in the CMU Department of Engineering and Public Policy. He has authored more than 120 papers in peer-reviewed scientific journals, as well as two books and several book chapters. He has published opinion pieces in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and the Washington Post. Apt received an A.B. in physics from Harvard College in 1971 and a Ph.D. in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1976. He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was a member of the Electric Power Research Institute Board of Directors from 2007 through 2013. He received the NASA Distinguished Service Medal and the Metcalf Lifetime Achievement Award for significant contributions to engineering.

Areas of Expertise

Public Policy
Physics
Energy
Risk Analysis
Engineering

Media Appearances

When severe weather hits, the public turns to this site mapping power outages

CNN  tv

2025-03-04

When big storms cause power outages, people use PowerOutage.US, a website to see where the power is out across the country. According to Jay Apt, (Tepper School of Business) who has researched the reliability of the electric power grid, the site uses tech that is based in part on the rise of “smart meters” - devices that measure power usage and report remotely to both the power customer and utility.

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U.S. natural gas pipelines vulnerable to electric outages

CMU Engineering  online

“In contrast to well-established reliability reporting and standards for the electrical system, the gas system has almost no reliability transparency or oversight,” says study co-author Jay Apt, an emeritus professor of engineering and public policy and business. “Establishing a federal gas reliability organization, comparable to what is now done for electric power, could improve gas reliability by establishing appropriate reliability reporting, incident investigation, and minimum industry standards.”

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An urgent plan to decarbonize electricity by 2035

The Hill  online

2021-09-09

We applaud the Biden administration’s goal of completely decarbonizing the U.S. electricity system by 2035. Achieving that, while keeping power affordable and reliable, will be an enormous but feasible undertaking requiring a continuous push for the next 14 years.

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Industry Expertise

Public Policy
Writing and Editing
Aerospace
Education/Learning
Research

Accomplishments

Metcalf Lifetime Achievement Award

2002

NASA Distinguished Service Medal

1997

Education

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Ph.D.

Experimental Atomic Physics

1976

Harvard College

B.A.

Physics

1971

Affiliations

  • American Association for the Advancement of Science : Fellow
  • Center for Climate and Energy Decision Making
  • Electricity Industry Center
  • Wilton E. Scott Institute for Energy Innovation

Articles

Inverter fast frequency response is a low-cost alternative to system inertia

Electric Power Systems Research

2023

Electric grids with high penetrations of utility-scale inverter-based resources (IBRs), such as wind, solar, and batteries, often have lower system inertia and need frequency support. One response is to keep traditional synchronous generators online to maintain adequate system inertia, which may reduce the number of IBRs on the system, increasing system emissions.

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How vulnerable are US natural gas pipelines to electric outages?

The Electricity Journal

2023

Gas-electric interdependencies have contributed to several major electric system emergencies. Natural gas pipelines use both gas-powered and electric-powered compressor units; power outages at the latter can cause gas shortages. We make the first rigorous identification of the number of US electric compressor stations, finding that 10% are electric.

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Making Electric Power More Resilient

Interdisciplinary Research on Climate and Energy Decision Making

2022

Large electric power outages of long duration are more common than one might expect. This chapter discusses the causes of such outages – including outages resulting from extreme events made worse by climate change, such as heat, cold, and tropical cyclones. It describes the pioneering work we did with a huge database of all the generator failures in the largest portion of the U.S. grid, showing that, contrary to the assumption that grid operators make, that failures will be random, when they calculate how many reserve generators must be online, many generators have failed all at once during hot or cold weather.

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