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Oct. 21, 2025

SEDV's Interdisciplinary Path to Energy Innovation

For Bartlett, the SEDV program is a connection between policy and technology as well as curiosity and application.

On a career path that has already taken her around the world, Caroline Bartlett sees the Master鈥檚 degree from the Sustainable Energy Development program at the School of Public Policy as a bridge.

For Bartlett, the program known by the acronym SEDV, is a connection between policy and technology as well as curiosity and application.

Her capstone project in the 16-month program explored how Alberta could harness waste heat generated by the growing number of energy-intensive data centres in the province. For Bartlett it reflects the program鈥檚 commitment to equipping students to tackle complex, real-world energy challenges with creativity and rigor.

Bartlett grew up in London, Ont., and was introduced to the world of climate and energy policy in her undergraduate degree in environmental policy at prestigious Middlebury College in Vermont. After graduation, she worked in Boston鈥檚 electricity sector, then moved west to Utah during the pandemic to join a multinational business development firm. She gained a global perspective on energy markets, collaborating with colleagues from around the world before her career in electricity took her to New Zealand.

Seeking to add more technical skills to her policy background, Bartlett began exploring graduate programs across Canada and the United States and the Master of Science for the SEDV program stood out for its interdisciplinary approach and openness to students from a variety of fields.

鈥淪EDV is geared towards people,鈥 Bartlett said. 鈥淭he other programs I looked at seemed geared towards people already in the technical fields. SEDV stood out as a program that accepted students who came from anywhere and could help you gain the skills you wanted.鈥

Turning Heat Into Opportunity

Her capstone project took a similarly winding path. Bartlett initially set out to compare different data centre cooling systems, but she soon found the topic too technically specialized. That challenge inspired a new question: What if waste heat wasn鈥檛 waste at all, but a renewable resource?

Through the systems-level thinking encouraged in the SEDV program, she discovered data centers are not energy consumers but rather energy converters. They transform massive amounts of electricity into computing power, producing a large amount of heat that is typically released into the atmosphere.

鈥淲aste heat is incorrectly named,鈥 she said. 鈥淲aste heat is just heat. It can be used again. There is a huge opportunity to capture and reuse this heat, rather than discard it.鈥

Bartlett acknowledged she faced challenges within her capstone project. Academic research, such as a capstone project, is an iterative process, but Bartlett said guidance from her faculty advisors helped her stay focused.

鈥淭hey鈥檇 remind me that I couldn鈥檛 do it all,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat there was an importance and benefit to staying focused on the right target.鈥

Charting Your Own SEDV Journey

Bartlett encourages future SEDV students to embrace the program鈥檚 breadth and dive deeply into topics that spark their curiosity. She also offered advice on the capstone project.

鈥淪tart early and research the topic you think you might be interested in for a couple of weeks because you won鈥檛 know where the project is going until it starts,鈥 she explained. 鈥淚nvesting that time upfront pays off significantly in the long run.鈥

Working on the capstone allowed Bartlett to apply classroom theory to a real-world issue. Helping her learn to navigate uncertainty and make progress even when all the data isn鈥檛 available, continues to influence how she approaches energy challenges.

鈥淭he SEDV program helped me connect ideas to action,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t taught me to see possibility where others might see limits, whether that鈥檚 in waste heat or in my own career.鈥漁n a career path that has already taken her around the world, Caroline Bartlett sees the Master鈥檚 degree from the Sustainable Energy Development program at the School of Public Policy as a bridge.

For Bartlett, the program known by the acronym SEDV, is a connection between policy and technology as well as curiosity and application.

Her capstone project in the 16-month program explored how Alberta could harness waste heat generated by the growing number of energy-intensive data centres in the province. For Bartlett it reflects the program鈥檚 commitment to equipping students to tackle complex, real-world energy challenges with creativity and rigor.

Bartlett grew up in London, Ont., and was introduced to the world of climate and energy policy in her undergraduate degree in environmental policy at prestigious Middlebury College in Vermont. After graduation, she worked in Boston鈥檚 electricity sector, then moved west to Utah during the pandemic to join a multinational business development firm. She gained a global perspective on energy markets, collaborating with colleagues from around the world before her career in electricity took her to New Zealand.

Seeking to add more technical skills to her policy background, Bartlett began exploring graduate programs across Canada and the United States and the Master of Science for the SEDV program stood out for its interdisciplinary approach and openness to students from a variety of fields.

鈥淪EDV is geared towards people,鈥 Bartlett said. 鈥淭he other programs I looked at seemed geared towards people already in the technical fields. SEDV stood out as a program that accepted students who came from anywhere and could help you gain the skills you wanted.鈥