Dr Patrick Moriarty,
BEng. (Melbourne); M Eng Sc (Melbourne). PhD (Newcastle, NSW)

Honorary Research Associate, Department of Mechanical Engineering,
Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.

Tel: +61 (0)3 9903 2584
Fax: +61 (0)3 9903 2076
Email: patrick.moriarty@eng.monash.edu.au

Profile:
Patrick Moriarty taught Civil Engineering at Dar es Salaam Technical College and carried out field research on low-cost housing for the National Housing and Building Research Unit from 1971-1977. Since 1977, his research interests at Monash University have been in the areas of urban land use and transport (both in Australia and Asia), and alternative energy. An important part of this research has been the climate change implications of different fuels/energy sources for transport and electricity generation.

Selected Publications since 2000

Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2007) Intermittent renewable energy: the only future source of hydrogen? Int. Journal of Hydrogenl Energy. In press
Moriarty, P. (2007) Environmental and resource constraints on Asian urban travel. Int. Journal of Environment and Pollution. Vol.30, No. 1, pp.8-26.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2007) World bioenergy: problems and prospects Int. Journal of Global Energy Issues Vol 27, No. 2, pp.231-249.
Honnery, D. and Moriarty, P. (2007) Liquid fuels from woody biomass, Int. Journal of Global Energy Issues, Vol 27, No. 2, pp.103-114
Moriarty, P. and Kennedy, D. (2006) ‘IE needs a sustainable and futurist orientation’, Paper for 2006 APIEMS conference, Bangkok.
Moriarty, P. and Mees, P. (2006) ‘The journey to work in Melbourne’, Proc. 29th ATRF Conference, 27-29 Sept., Gold Coast, Queensland.
Moriarty, P. (2006) The view from 2050, AQ Sept./Oct., pp.4-12.
Moriarty, P. and Kennedy, D. (2005) Tertiary teaching and learning: no easy technical fixes, Ch. 11 in Greg Shaw (ed.) Teaching and Learning: Dealing with Diversity, Charles Darwin University Press.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2005) ‘Determinants of urban travel in Australia’, Proc. 28th ATRF, 28-30 Sept., Sydney.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2005) ‘Can renewable fuels avert global climate change?’ Seventeenth International Clean Air and Environment Conference, 3-5 May, Hobart, Tasmania.
Moriarty, P. and Kennedy, D. (2004) ‘Voluntary travel change: an Australian case study’ Third International Conference on Traffic and Transport Psychology, 5-9 September, Nottingham, UK.
Moriarty, P. and Kennedy, D. (2004) ‘The future of the world car industry’
APIEMS Conference 2004, Dec. 12th-15th, Gold Coast, Queensland.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2004) ‘Forecasting world transport in the year 2050’ International Journal of Vehicle Design, 35 (1/2), pp.151-165.
Honnery, D. and Moriarty, P. (2004) ‘Future vehicles: an introduction’ Int. Journal of Vehicle Design, 35 (1/2), pp.1-8.
Moriarty, P. and Kennedy, D. (2004) ‘The web, the public, and the global warming debate’. Cybernetics and Systems 35 (7/8), pp.723-736.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2003) ‘Safety impacts of vehicular information technology’. International. Journal of Vehicle Design 31 (2), pp. 176-186.
Moriarty, P. and Honnery, D. (2003) ‘Alternative transport fuels: the long-term future’ International Journal of Vehicle Design, 31 (1), pp. 11-21.
Moriarty, P. (2002) ‘Do travel time and money budgets exist?’ Roads and Transport Research, 11 (4), pp. 14-23.
Moriarty, P. (2002) ‘Environmental sustainability of large Australian cities’ Urban Policy and Research, 20 (3), pp.233-44.
Moriarty, P. (2000) ‘Car travel: Asia cannot follow Australia’s path’ Roads and Transport Research, 9 (2), pp.33-41.

 
 
 

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