The Cabildo de Tenerife, the University of La Laguna (ULL) and the University of Cape Verde have presented their own Master in Energy Decarbonization of Emerging Countries. This course is the result of the joint work of the island institution, through Foreign Action, with higher education centers.
The academic project includes three titles. One in Technology for Electric Decarbonization, a second in Electric and Fuel Decarbonization and a third in Energy Regulation and Integration in Insular Systems and Emerging Countries.
“We must have a general approach to the problems that affect us globally with the responsibility of contributing to their improvement in emerging countries,” says the CEO of Foreign Action, Liskel Álvarez.
“For more than two decades now, the tendency of European universities is to work in consortia, among themselves and other associated countries,” sums up the vice-rector for Internationalization of the ULL, Lidia Cabrera.
For his part, the course director, Professor Ricardo Guerrero highlights that the teaching load of the degrees is distributed almost 50% between the ULL and the UCV, which guarantees the insular perspective and an emerging country.