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HEINRICH MANDEL
1919-1979
BY WALKER L. CISLER
HEINRICH MANDEL, elected in 1976 as a Foreign Associate of the
National Academy of Engineering, died on January 24, 1979. He
was a Professor, Doctor of Engineering, Doctor of Philosophy, and
Chairman of the Management Board of Rheinisch Westfalisches
Elektrizitatswerk AG (RWE). He will long be remembered not only
for his outstanding leadership of a great electric utility system but,
more particularly, for his incisive analysis of the current world
energy crisis. Professor Mandel saw clearly the developing shortages
of petroleum and gas and the potential dangers from intensified
competition for diminishing supplies. He was convinced that the
future well-being of many countries was closely linked with an ade-
quate supply of energy at favorable prices, that a substitute must be
found for the failing contribution of oil and gas, and that the substi-
tute must be nuclear fission.
Heinrich Mandel was born on August 1l, 1919, in Prague,
Czechoslovakia, where his family had lived for several generations.
He studied mechanical engineering at the local Institute of Technol-
ogy and received his Doctor of Engineering degree in 1943. After
military service during the war, he joined the RWE organization in
1948. In 1950 he entered the University of Cologne to study physics
and was granted a Doctor of Philosophy degree in 1952. He
accepted a professorship at Technische Hochschule Aachen in 1963,
a post he held for the rest of his life.
After completing his studies at Cologne, Heinrich Mandel
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184
MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
devoted himself to the prognosis of electric power demand and total
energy requirements. After 1955 the German Federal Republic
again was allowed to work on nuclear power plant technology, and
from then on, Professor Mandel had a key role in its development.
He recognized that, in the long run, a dependable energy supply was
impossible without it. Largely as a result of his drive and leadership,
a small, 15-megawatt nuclear power plant was built at Kahl/Main in
1958. Experience acquired there and at the demonstration plant at
Gundremmingen/Danube provided an important background for
the further development of nuclear power in the Federal Republic,
culminating in the construction and successful operation of two
1,200-megawatt nuclear units at Bilbis. He was cofounder of the
German Society for the Regeneration of Nuclear Fuels, a constant
supporter of German centrifuge technology and of a European
enrichment industry. He was President of the German Atomic
Forum.
In 1961 Heinrich Mandel was elected to the Board of Manage-
ment of RWE with principal responsibilities for construction and
operation of power plants. In addition to the successful introduction
of nuclear power, spoken of above, he had a key role in the develop-
ment of power plants burning brown coal. These plants, using pro-
gressively larger units up to today's 600-megawatt machines, were
an important factor in controlling electric power costs and thus
contributing to the favorable development of the German economy.
Heinrich Mandel's ideas concerning energy policies reached far
beyond the boundaries of West Germany. He ably represented his
country on many international energy bodies. He was constantly
sought after as a participant in conferences and forums. He pre-
sented many papers on the basic importance of conservation, on the
environmental impact of energy, and on the need to find a substitute
for the dwindling reserves of oil and gas.
In 1977 he was elected Chairman of the Executive Council of the
World Energy Conference, a position he held until his death. In the
same year an honorary Doctorate of Engineering was conferred
upon Heinrich Mandel by Michigan Technological University.
Heinrich Mandel was deeply concerned with the substantial dif-
ferences between nations in economic development. He believed
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HEINRIC H MANDEL
185
that an important factor in the past development of industrialized
nations had been a supply of energy at favorable costs and in ade-
quate amounts. He also believed that the gap between industrialized
nations and developing countries can be narrowed only if adequate
supplies of energy are available to developing nations. He therefore
urged that the industrialized nations push ahead with the develop-
ment of nuclear power so that a greater share of the diminishing
supply of oil and gas would be available to the developing countries.
He was well aware of the worldwide concern with the proliferation
of nuclear weapons, but he nevertheless insisted that the breeder
reactor was an essential part of the nuclear program and that the
long-term potential of nuclear power could only be reached with a
balanced program including the breeder reactor. He was convinced
that the proliferation problem could be solved through International
Atomic Energy Association controls and cooperative agreements.
Heinrich Mandel's untimely death is a great loss to the entire
world. He will long be remembered for his early recognition of the
developing energy crisis and, most particularly, for his constant
readiness to support his ideas on how the crisis might be met with
well-considered reasons. His life philosophy is probably best
reflected by his statement to the graduating class at Michigan Tech-
nological University on May 21, 1977: "I Filly believe that it is
possible to make our world a better place to live in. . . . "
Representative terms from entire chapter:
federal republic