The document outlines the agenda for the 2015 GreenGov Symposium, which brought together senior administration officials and stakeholders to discuss strategies for sustainability in the federal government. The event featured presentations on topics like achieving clean energy goals, climate change, sustainable supply chains, green buildings, and energy efficiency. Keynote speakers included Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus and EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy. The agenda covered initiatives to reduce emissions, waste, and water usage while improving sustainability across federal operations.
The document summarizes a research project examining public attitudes towards transforming the UK's whole energy system by 2050. The project uses multiple methods including public deliberations, an online scenario tool called My2050, and a national survey. Key findings include that the British public widely supports changing how energy is produced and used, and favors including high levels of renewable energy like offshore wind. National governments are seen as playing a large role in bringing about energy system changes. Successful public engagement was achieved through using mixed methods and addressing the public's long-term vision and values.
Behavioural Meetup: Perceptions of and behavioural responses to climate change.Poppy Mulvaney PhD
Our February Behavioural Meetup featured Prof. Lorraine Whitmarsh from the University of Cardiff:
Despite scientific consensus about the reality and severity of climate change, the public appears to show relatively little concern about the issue and to be taking few actions to tackle it. In this talk, we will discuss what influences public perceptions and how they may be shaped by communication. Recent survey and interview data, and findings from psychological experiments will be used to expose the strong ideological and social influences on public attitudes to climate change. Research will also be presented on low-carbon lifestyles, along with insights into fostering behaviour change, including new research to achieve behavioural ‘spillover’ (i.e., when changing one behaviour leads to further behavioural changes).
Behavioural Meetup: "Think global, act local? Public engagement with climate ...Prime Decision
Our spreaker for the February 2016 Behavioural Meetup in Bristol was Prof. Lorraine Whitemarsh from the University of Cardiff.
Despite scientific consensus about the reality and severity of climate change, the public appears to show relatively little concern about the issue and to be taking few actions to tackle it. In this talk, we will discuss what influences public perceptions and how they may be shaped by communication. Recent survey and interview data, and findings from psychological experiments will be used to expose the strong ideological and social influences on public attitudes to climate change. Research will also be presented on low-carbon lifestyles, along with insights into fostering behaviour change, including new research to achieve behavioural ‘spillover’ (i.e., when changing one behaviour leads to further behavioural changes).
This document discusses renewable energy adoption by municipal governments in Colorado. It analyzes the factors that influence two municipalities, Aspen and Fort Morgan, to pursue renewable energy through a synthesis of path dependence theory and organizational change theory. The document first provides background on the problem of climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions from non-renewable energy generation. It then presents the research questions and literature review on comparative approaches to renewable energy adoption and organizational change theory.
Klaus Toepfer, the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme, welcomed a new climate initiative led by the United States to work with Australia and Asian countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. He said developing countries need efficient energy technologies to lift populations out of poverty without harming the environment. The US recognizes that dependence on fossil fuels is economically burdensome and that diversifying energy supplies with cleaner coal, renewables, and efficiency makes sense. However, the initiative does not replace legally binding emissions reductions under the Kyoto Protocol and more investment is still needed to help vulnerable countries adapt to climate change. Technological change as promoted by this initiative could stimulate industries and research to lead to cleaner energy systems, if it meaningfully reduces
Since 2007, The Climate Institute has conducted comprehensive quantitative and qualitative research into Australian attitudes to climate change and its solutions. We have published a number of Climate of the Nation reports and aim to publish annual mid-year reports to track evolving attitudes and actions.
More information can be found on The Climate institute's website:
www.climateinstitute.org.au/climate-of-the-nation-2012.html
Since 2007, The Climate Institute has conducted comprehensive quantitative and qualitative research into Australian attitudes to climate change and its solutions.
More information can be found on The Climate institute's website:
www.climateinstitute.org.au/climate-of-the-nation-2013.html
The European Commission spokeswoman welcomed the new U.S.-Pacific agreement on climate change as complementary to the Kyoto Protocol and not a replacement. She said the agreement recognizes efforts under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and contributes to strengthening momentum for post-2012 climate negotiations. However, she noted that technology alone cannot achieve the necessary emissions cuts and the Commission still hopes to reach a global agreement, particularly with large polluters. The spokeswoman denied the Commission has lost sight of a multilateral climate agreement after 2012.
The document summarizes a research project examining public attitudes towards transforming the UK's whole energy system by 2050. The project uses multiple methods including public deliberations, an online scenario tool called My2050, and a national survey. Key findings include that the British public widely supports changing how energy is produced and used, and favors including high levels of renewable energy like offshore wind. National governments are seen as playing a large role in bringing about energy system changes. Successful public engagement was achieved through using mixed methods and addressing the public's long-term vision and values.
Behavioural Meetup: Perceptions of and behavioural responses to climate change.Poppy Mulvaney PhD
Our February Behavioural Meetup featured Prof. Lorraine Whitmarsh from the University of Cardiff:
Despite scientific consensus about the reality and severity of climate change, the public appears to show relatively little concern about the issue and to be taking few actions to tackle it. In this talk, we will discuss what influences public perceptions and how they may be shaped by communication. Recent survey and interview data, and findings from psychological experiments will be used to expose the strong ideological and social influences on public attitudes to climate change. Research will also be presented on low-carbon lifestyles, along with insights into fostering behaviour change, including new research to achieve behavioural ‘spillover’ (i.e., when changing one behaviour leads to further behavioural changes).
Behavioural Meetup: "Think global, act local? Public engagement with climate ...Prime Decision
Our spreaker for the February 2016 Behavioural Meetup in Bristol was Prof. Lorraine Whitemarsh from the University of Cardiff.
Despite scientific consensus about the reality and severity of climate change, the public appears to show relatively little concern about the issue and to be taking few actions to tackle it. In this talk, we will discuss what influences public perceptions and how they may be shaped by communication. Recent survey and interview data, and findings from psychological experiments will be used to expose the strong ideological and social influences on public attitudes to climate change. Research will also be presented on low-carbon lifestyles, along with insights into fostering behaviour change, including new research to achieve behavioural ‘spillover’ (i.e., when changing one behaviour leads to further behavioural changes).
This document discusses renewable energy adoption by municipal governments in Colorado. It analyzes the factors that influence two municipalities, Aspen and Fort Morgan, to pursue renewable energy through a synthesis of path dependence theory and organizational change theory. The document first provides background on the problem of climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions from non-renewable energy generation. It then presents the research questions and literature review on comparative approaches to renewable energy adoption and organizational change theory.
Klaus Toepfer, the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme, welcomed a new climate initiative led by the United States to work with Australia and Asian countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. He said developing countries need efficient energy technologies to lift populations out of poverty without harming the environment. The US recognizes that dependence on fossil fuels is economically burdensome and that diversifying energy supplies with cleaner coal, renewables, and efficiency makes sense. However, the initiative does not replace legally binding emissions reductions under the Kyoto Protocol and more investment is still needed to help vulnerable countries adapt to climate change. Technological change as promoted by this initiative could stimulate industries and research to lead to cleaner energy systems, if it meaningfully reduces
Since 2007, The Climate Institute has conducted comprehensive quantitative and qualitative research into Australian attitudes to climate change and its solutions. We have published a number of Climate of the Nation reports and aim to publish annual mid-year reports to track evolving attitudes and actions.
More information can be found on The Climate institute's website:
www.climateinstitute.org.au/climate-of-the-nation-2012.html
Since 2007, The Climate Institute has conducted comprehensive quantitative and qualitative research into Australian attitudes to climate change and its solutions.
More information can be found on The Climate institute's website:
www.climateinstitute.org.au/climate-of-the-nation-2013.html
The European Commission spokeswoman welcomed the new U.S.-Pacific agreement on climate change as complementary to the Kyoto Protocol and not a replacement. She said the agreement recognizes efforts under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and contributes to strengthening momentum for post-2012 climate negotiations. However, she noted that technology alone cannot achieve the necessary emissions cuts and the Commission still hopes to reach a global agreement, particularly with large polluters. The spokeswoman denied the Commission has lost sight of a multilateral climate agreement after 2012.
A sham report from the so-called Union of Concerned Scientists that tries to denigrate clean-burning natural gas and its use as a fuel to generate electricity. They liken it to a gamble on our future.
1) The AIACC project studied climate change adaptation across many developing world regions. A key lesson is to adapt to climate impacts now to avoid greater costs later ("a stitch in time saves nine").
2) Current climate hazards already cause significant damages, demonstrating an "adaptation deficit" that climate change will worsen if left unaddressed. Acting now can yield immediate benefits and enable longer-term adaptation.
3) Other important lessons include: integrating adaptation with development; increasing knowledge about climate risks and responses; strengthening institutions; protecting degraded natural resources; providing financial assistance; involving at-risk communities; and using place-specific adaptation strategies tailored to local conditions.
The document discusses the increasing dependence on computer technology and its future applications and impacts. It predicts that technology will continue penetrating more areas of life like communication, education, business, and relationships. While acknowledging benefits, it expresses concern that over-reliance on technology for communication could undermine people's ability to communicate face-to-face, which is important for humanity. The document concludes that while the growth of technology is inevitable, its impacts may not be entirely positive.
Today, CO2 emissions from fossil fuels are around 50 per cent higher than they were 20 years ago, and have been rising each year. This kind of change to the chemical mixture in the air doesn’t come without consequences. Acting like a blanket, the build-up of greenhouse gases is the main reason why the average global temperature has risen by nearly 1°C in the last century. This booklet explains why a rise of only a few degrees in the average global temperature risks our prosperity, security, and health. It explains why it is so important to reverse the rise in emissions within the decade. And why it is still within our means to do so. For more information visit www.climateinstitute.org.au/dangerous-degrees.html
This document provides a lesson on global warming that is designed to be completed in one to three class periods. It discusses key concepts around global warming including the greenhouse effect, causes of rising carbon dioxide levels, evidence of climate change, and potential impacts. Students are engaged through class discussions and an assessment where they write an essay evaluating evidence on the causes and effects of global warming.
This document is a letter from the Climate Leadership Panel to the Minister of Environment and Parks in Alberta. It provides an executive summary of the panel's climate leadership report and process. The panel engaged extensively with Albertans through public sessions, technical sessions, and online submissions to inform their policy recommendations. They heard a diversity of perspectives, including support for ambitious climate action and concerns about economic impacts. The panel believes their report provides effective policy options to reduce emissions and position Alberta as a climate leader at the national and international level.
Climate Change in the Dayton, Ohioian MindCity of Dayton
This report presents findings from a regional survey which assessed thoughts and self-reported behaviors related to climate change. Dayton residents, employees, and travelers passing through the Dayton International Airport (N = 516) responded to the survey. Made possible by the Great Lakes Adaptation and Assessment for Cities. Research conducted by Wright State University. A research project organized by the City of Dayton's Department of Water.
Green Roof Proposal and Guide - Athens, GAFlanna489y
The document proposes installing a green roof on the east balcony of Athens-Clarke County City Hall to help reduce stormwater runoff. It provides two design options for the roof: a loose laid system or modular system. The loose laid system involves separately installing roof components while the modular system combines components into plastic trays. The document also discusses project budget, benefits of green roofs, maintenance needs, and potential legal issues to consider for the project. Guidelines are provided to help evaluate future green roof development sites.
This document provides an introduction and overview for a guide to making U.S. embassies more environmentally sustainable. It discusses the need to address climate change through reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the building sector. The U.S. Department of State owns and leases millions of square feet of buildings worldwide, so improving the sustainability of its embassies can significantly impact energy use and emissions. The guide aims to help mission staff implement best practices to lower energy and water use and waste, reflecting both U.S. commitments and the department's leadership in "eco-diplomacy."
This newsletter summarizes events and news from the Sustainable Energy Development (SEDV) Master's program at the University of Calgary:
- The editor reflects on her experience with the SEDV program and passing the editor role to a new student.
- An article describes a garden mixer event for new and returning SEDV students, where they socialized, played games, cooked food and planted crops together in the community garden.
- A profile of Professor Allan Ingelson provides details on his work with environmental law and energy policy, and his views on changes upcoming in sustainable energy development.
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has the potential to empower women through gender-friendly methodologies that improve their lives, such as projects providing efficient cookstoves, access to renewable energy, and income generation opportunities. Two examples highlighted are efficient cookstove projects in Nigeria and a rural electrification micro-hydro project in Bhutan that gave women more free time and reduced household costs. Going forward, the UNFCCC secretariat aims to further mainstream gender considerations in the CDM process and encourage more projects that benefit women and children.
source of energy effect on their enviromentteklay godefa
This document is a report submitted by a group of 7 students for their Sustainable Energy Technology course. It discusses various energy resources and their effects on the environment. It begins with an introduction that outlines the problem of energy resources affecting the environment. The literature review then examines renewable energy sources like hydroelectric, wind, and solar as well as nonrenewable sources like fossil fuels and their environmental impacts. The methodology section proposes ways to reduce these impacts, such as using alternative energy, managing radioactive waste, and introducing new technologies. The document concludes with recommendations for minimizing energy's effect on the climate.
A "report" from the anti-drilling group Food & Water Watch. It is a compendium of hackneyed, worn-out, recycled, nonsensical pablum that fracking will fry the earth. It's based on the misconception that using fossil fuels leads to global warming and attempts to equate fracking with so-called "climate change." Essentially, it's fundraising propaganda for FWW.
The GRC Bulletin provides a technology and issues forum for professionals involved in geothermal resource research, exploration, development and utilization. The GRC Bulletin also provides news and information that highlights the environmental and economic benefits of geothermal resource development.
22. TCI Climate of the Nation Flagship Report 2012Richard Plumpton
This document summarizes the findings of a report on Australian attitudes toward climate change in 2012. It was conducted through focus groups and surveys between April and May 2012, a time of highly politicized debate around climate change policies in Australia. The research found that Australians were uncertain about the science of climate change, unconvinced by carbon pricing solutions due to fears over rising costs of living, and had lost confidence in experts and governments on the issue. However, attitudes remained fluid and could still be influenced on both the reality and solutions regarding climate change.
Water They Doing Right In Yakima? by Aldric Ulep - AWRA IWRM Conference 2014Aldric James Ulep
Delivered July 2014 in Reno, NV for the American Water Resources Association's Summer Specialty Conference on Integrated Water Resources Management.
Abstract: Ever since the Yakima River Basin Water Enhancement Project Workgroup (YRBWEP Workgroup) arrived at a consensus agreement, its Yakima River Basin Integrated Water Resource Management Plan (Yakima Plan) has been touted as a paragon for collaborative watershed planning. While the YRBWEP Workgroup holds some potential as a model of success for similar basin planning groups, it is critical to first understand the drivers behind its success. This study examines the process that created the Yakima Plan and evaluates the Yakima Plan’s success. In order to identify factors that led the YRBWEP Workgroup to consensus agreement, I analyze qualitative data collected from interviews with approximately 12 stakeholders who represent a variety of interests. I set my findings against theory of successful practices of collaborative watershed partnerships and compare theory to practice. I found that grassroots stakeholders united on shared values to move forward, the state and federal stakeholders engaged actively and coordinated initiatives, and the YRBWEP Workgroup committed to a balanced approach to watershed planning. By closely examining the case of the YRBWEP Workgroup and the Yakima Plan, this study seeks to inform collaborative watershed planning groups of what to think about while considering theoretically effective strategies for success.
It seems like just yesterday I was working on the original 2008 analysis for the Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative. Knowing where we started and seeing where we are now, the progress has been remarkable. It's a testament to how policy can accelerate innovation and lead to lasting community change. And we’re just getting started!
~ Dawn Lippert, Chairwoman, HCEI Advisory Board, and Chief Executive Officer
Bipartisan Policy Center Study: New Dynamics of the U.S. Natural Gas MarketMarcellus Drilling News
A new study published by the Bipartisan Policy Center about the near and long-term prospects for natural gas usage and pricing in the United States. The key findings of the report include relatively low prices for natural gas even if demand spikes and even if the U.S. starts exporting natural gas--due to the superabundance of shale gas supplies.
This document discusses hope and inspiration for moving forward on climate change issues through community connections. It outlines concerns about climate change and encourages considering small actions individuals can take that fit their skills and interests, working with others, and finding joy in sustainable living. Potential actions are suggested for homes, transportation, food, population issues and more. Education is emphasized as key to addressing these challenges over the long term.
This document provides information about the 45th Spring Conference of the American Bar Association's Section of Environment, Energy, and Resources. The conference will take place in downtown Austin and will address the latest developments in environmental, energy, and natural resource law through panel discussions, breakout sessions, and presentations from government agencies and experts. Topics will include recent Supreme Court cases, enforcement priorities, endangered species issues, and challenges relating to drought, agriculture, and food security. The conference aims to help attorneys keep their practice current on key legal issues.
A sham report from the so-called Union of Concerned Scientists that tries to denigrate clean-burning natural gas and its use as a fuel to generate electricity. They liken it to a gamble on our future.
1) The AIACC project studied climate change adaptation across many developing world regions. A key lesson is to adapt to climate impacts now to avoid greater costs later ("a stitch in time saves nine").
2) Current climate hazards already cause significant damages, demonstrating an "adaptation deficit" that climate change will worsen if left unaddressed. Acting now can yield immediate benefits and enable longer-term adaptation.
3) Other important lessons include: integrating adaptation with development; increasing knowledge about climate risks and responses; strengthening institutions; protecting degraded natural resources; providing financial assistance; involving at-risk communities; and using place-specific adaptation strategies tailored to local conditions.
The document discusses the increasing dependence on computer technology and its future applications and impacts. It predicts that technology will continue penetrating more areas of life like communication, education, business, and relationships. While acknowledging benefits, it expresses concern that over-reliance on technology for communication could undermine people's ability to communicate face-to-face, which is important for humanity. The document concludes that while the growth of technology is inevitable, its impacts may not be entirely positive.
Today, CO2 emissions from fossil fuels are around 50 per cent higher than they were 20 years ago, and have been rising each year. This kind of change to the chemical mixture in the air doesn’t come without consequences. Acting like a blanket, the build-up of greenhouse gases is the main reason why the average global temperature has risen by nearly 1°C in the last century. This booklet explains why a rise of only a few degrees in the average global temperature risks our prosperity, security, and health. It explains why it is so important to reverse the rise in emissions within the decade. And why it is still within our means to do so. For more information visit www.climateinstitute.org.au/dangerous-degrees.html
This document provides a lesson on global warming that is designed to be completed in one to three class periods. It discusses key concepts around global warming including the greenhouse effect, causes of rising carbon dioxide levels, evidence of climate change, and potential impacts. Students are engaged through class discussions and an assessment where they write an essay evaluating evidence on the causes and effects of global warming.
This document is a letter from the Climate Leadership Panel to the Minister of Environment and Parks in Alberta. It provides an executive summary of the panel's climate leadership report and process. The panel engaged extensively with Albertans through public sessions, technical sessions, and online submissions to inform their policy recommendations. They heard a diversity of perspectives, including support for ambitious climate action and concerns about economic impacts. The panel believes their report provides effective policy options to reduce emissions and position Alberta as a climate leader at the national and international level.
Climate Change in the Dayton, Ohioian MindCity of Dayton
This report presents findings from a regional survey which assessed thoughts and self-reported behaviors related to climate change. Dayton residents, employees, and travelers passing through the Dayton International Airport (N = 516) responded to the survey. Made possible by the Great Lakes Adaptation and Assessment for Cities. Research conducted by Wright State University. A research project organized by the City of Dayton's Department of Water.
Green Roof Proposal and Guide - Athens, GAFlanna489y
The document proposes installing a green roof on the east balcony of Athens-Clarke County City Hall to help reduce stormwater runoff. It provides two design options for the roof: a loose laid system or modular system. The loose laid system involves separately installing roof components while the modular system combines components into plastic trays. The document also discusses project budget, benefits of green roofs, maintenance needs, and potential legal issues to consider for the project. Guidelines are provided to help evaluate future green roof development sites.
This document provides an introduction and overview for a guide to making U.S. embassies more environmentally sustainable. It discusses the need to address climate change through reducing greenhouse gas emissions from the building sector. The U.S. Department of State owns and leases millions of square feet of buildings worldwide, so improving the sustainability of its embassies can significantly impact energy use and emissions. The guide aims to help mission staff implement best practices to lower energy and water use and waste, reflecting both U.S. commitments and the department's leadership in "eco-diplomacy."
This newsletter summarizes events and news from the Sustainable Energy Development (SEDV) Master's program at the University of Calgary:
- The editor reflects on her experience with the SEDV program and passing the editor role to a new student.
- An article describes a garden mixer event for new and returning SEDV students, where they socialized, played games, cooked food and planted crops together in the community garden.
- A profile of Professor Allan Ingelson provides details on his work with environmental law and energy policy, and his views on changes upcoming in sustainable energy development.
The Clean Development Mechanism (CDM) has the potential to empower women through gender-friendly methodologies that improve their lives, such as projects providing efficient cookstoves, access to renewable energy, and income generation opportunities. Two examples highlighted are efficient cookstove projects in Nigeria and a rural electrification micro-hydro project in Bhutan that gave women more free time and reduced household costs. Going forward, the UNFCCC secretariat aims to further mainstream gender considerations in the CDM process and encourage more projects that benefit women and children.
source of energy effect on their enviromentteklay godefa
This document is a report submitted by a group of 7 students for their Sustainable Energy Technology course. It discusses various energy resources and their effects on the environment. It begins with an introduction that outlines the problem of energy resources affecting the environment. The literature review then examines renewable energy sources like hydroelectric, wind, and solar as well as nonrenewable sources like fossil fuels and their environmental impacts. The methodology section proposes ways to reduce these impacts, such as using alternative energy, managing radioactive waste, and introducing new technologies. The document concludes with recommendations for minimizing energy's effect on the climate.
A "report" from the anti-drilling group Food & Water Watch. It is a compendium of hackneyed, worn-out, recycled, nonsensical pablum that fracking will fry the earth. It's based on the misconception that using fossil fuels leads to global warming and attempts to equate fracking with so-called "climate change." Essentially, it's fundraising propaganda for FWW.
The GRC Bulletin provides a technology and issues forum for professionals involved in geothermal resource research, exploration, development and utilization. The GRC Bulletin also provides news and information that highlights the environmental and economic benefits of geothermal resource development.
22. TCI Climate of the Nation Flagship Report 2012Richard Plumpton
This document summarizes the findings of a report on Australian attitudes toward climate change in 2012. It was conducted through focus groups and surveys between April and May 2012, a time of highly politicized debate around climate change policies in Australia. The research found that Australians were uncertain about the science of climate change, unconvinced by carbon pricing solutions due to fears over rising costs of living, and had lost confidence in experts and governments on the issue. However, attitudes remained fluid and could still be influenced on both the reality and solutions regarding climate change.
Water They Doing Right In Yakima? by Aldric Ulep - AWRA IWRM Conference 2014Aldric James Ulep
Delivered July 2014 in Reno, NV for the American Water Resources Association's Summer Specialty Conference on Integrated Water Resources Management.
Abstract: Ever since the Yakima River Basin Water Enhancement Project Workgroup (YRBWEP Workgroup) arrived at a consensus agreement, its Yakima River Basin Integrated Water Resource Management Plan (Yakima Plan) has been touted as a paragon for collaborative watershed planning. While the YRBWEP Workgroup holds some potential as a model of success for similar basin planning groups, it is critical to first understand the drivers behind its success. This study examines the process that created the Yakima Plan and evaluates the Yakima Plan’s success. In order to identify factors that led the YRBWEP Workgroup to consensus agreement, I analyze qualitative data collected from interviews with approximately 12 stakeholders who represent a variety of interests. I set my findings against theory of successful practices of collaborative watershed partnerships and compare theory to practice. I found that grassroots stakeholders united on shared values to move forward, the state and federal stakeholders engaged actively and coordinated initiatives, and the YRBWEP Workgroup committed to a balanced approach to watershed planning. By closely examining the case of the YRBWEP Workgroup and the Yakima Plan, this study seeks to inform collaborative watershed planning groups of what to think about while considering theoretically effective strategies for success.
It seems like just yesterday I was working on the original 2008 analysis for the Hawaii Clean Energy Initiative. Knowing where we started and seeing where we are now, the progress has been remarkable. It's a testament to how policy can accelerate innovation and lead to lasting community change. And we’re just getting started!
~ Dawn Lippert, Chairwoman, HCEI Advisory Board, and Chief Executive Officer
Bipartisan Policy Center Study: New Dynamics of the U.S. Natural Gas MarketMarcellus Drilling News
A new study published by the Bipartisan Policy Center about the near and long-term prospects for natural gas usage and pricing in the United States. The key findings of the report include relatively low prices for natural gas even if demand spikes and even if the U.S. starts exporting natural gas--due to the superabundance of shale gas supplies.
This document discusses hope and inspiration for moving forward on climate change issues through community connections. It outlines concerns about climate change and encourages considering small actions individuals can take that fit their skills and interests, working with others, and finding joy in sustainable living. Potential actions are suggested for homes, transportation, food, population issues and more. Education is emphasized as key to addressing these challenges over the long term.
This document provides information about the 45th Spring Conference of the American Bar Association's Section of Environment, Energy, and Resources. The conference will take place in downtown Austin and will address the latest developments in environmental, energy, and natural resource law through panel discussions, breakout sessions, and presentations from government agencies and experts. Topics will include recent Supreme Court cases, enforcement priorities, endangered species issues, and challenges relating to drought, agriculture, and food security. The conference aims to help attorneys keep their practice current on key legal issues.
Great Energy Efficiency Day Welcome: Kateri Callahan, Alliance to Save EnergyAlliance To Save Energy
Presentation from the Alliance to Save Energy's 2010 Great Energy Efficiency Day, which took place on March 10, 2010 in the Dirksen Senate Office Building in Washington, DC.
This document provides the agenda for a dialogue on federal fleet electrification that took place on July 11, 2016 at George Washington University Law School. The agenda included welcoming remarks, a keynote speech on electric vehicle technology, and three panels discussing examples of non-federal fleet electrification, experiences and ideas for increasing federal fleet electrification, and moving toward more sustainable transportation beyond fleet vehicles. The event was intended to accelerate federal efforts to electrify vehicle fleets and featured representatives from government agencies, universities, and private companies working on electric transportation.
Pradeep leads UNDP’s Nature, Climate and Energy team of over 200 advisors located across 5 regional hubs and UNDP headquarters. He oversees a portfolio of over $4.5 billion for projects related to ecosystems, forests, oceans, climate strategies, energy access, and more in 142 countries. Under his leadership, UNDP facilitates over 50% of funding from two major climate adaptation funds. He helped UNDP support over 40 countries accessing $800 million from the Green Climate Fund for climate actions.
A draft report of PA Gov. Tom Wolf's Pipeline Infrastructure Task Force (PITF) Report. The draft was issued on Nov. 10, 2015. The final version will be issued in February 2016. The report contains 184 suggestions for better oversight/management of PA's unregulated gathering pipeline system.
Water Resource Reporting and Water Footprint from Marcellus Shale Development...Brian Rosa
This report analyzes water usage and waste disposal data from Marcellus Shale gas development in West Virginia and Pennsylvania between 2009-2012. It finds that over this period, nearly 9,000 horizontal gas wells were permitted using hydraulic fracturing, which led to increased gas production but also significant water usage and waste generation. The report calculates water footprints for gas production and identifies areas where state reporting requirements could be improved to better inform management of environmental impacts. It concludes that while regulation of the industry has strengthened water protections, continued improvements to data transparency are still needed.
To All My Friends and Colleagues in the Sarasota Vicinity:
I'm attaching the resume of Daren Cheatham who is currently seeking employment in the field of Sustainable Energy. Daren is a top notch professional and should you know of any positions that might interest him, please feel free to reach out to him. His contact information is on the resume.
Kind personal regards,
Todd Kwait
This document announces a roundtable event to present local case studies and tools for low impact development strategies to address water consumption and pollution in Massachusetts. Three speakers - Kurt Gaertner from the MA Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Sara Cohen from the Department of Conservation and Recreation, and John Schmid from Nitsch Engineering - will discuss the Smart Growth Tool Kit, innovative strategies being implemented in the Ipswich River Watershed, and stormwater mitigation challenges for the redevelopment of Jackson Square in Boston. Attendees can learn about low impact development issues and resources in Massachusetts.
Petes 2014 science integration into us climate and ocean policy discussionLoretta Roberson
This document discusses science integration into US climate and ocean policy. It outlines several key US policy initiatives that aim to manage impacts of climate change and ocean acidification such as the National Climate Assessment. Examples of how scientific information has been incorporated into policies and planning are provided, including through climate assessments, early-warning systems, and long-term planning like marine protected areas. Opportunities for advancing partnerships between scientists and decision-makers are explored, such as collaborating on research and ensuring scientific findings are disseminated in usable formats.
This document provides a preliminary report on the Standards and Guidelines for Sustainable Sites Initiative. It acknowledges the partnership and contributors developing the Initiative. The Executive Summary outlines the Initiative's goal of defining sustainability in land development and management practices. It recommends assembling an integrated project team, conducting thorough site assessments, and integrating practices that replicate healthy ecological systems. The report details the timeline and process for developing standards, guidelines, a rating system, and reference guide over the next five years. It invites feedback on the preliminary findings.
This document provides an introduction and overview of a sourcebook focused on innovations for reducing home energy use through behavior change. It contains chapters written by various contributors on topics related to leveraging points for sustainable energy consumption, evaluating theoretical frameworks for tailored energy interventions, quantifying the value of home energy improvements, incorporating home energy ratings into real estate listings, improving neighborhood energy knowledge, linking climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts in homes, leveraging employer relationships to reduce residential greenhouse gas emissions, and increasing the effectiveness of residential energy efficiency programs. The sourcebook brings together multidisciplinary perspectives and ideas from a summit organized by Duke University and RTI International to generate new approaches for engaging homeowners in reducing energy consumption.
The document summarizes a panel discussion on South Florida's energy future that was sponsored by several local organizations and institutions. The panel included experts from the public, private and nonprofit sectors working in areas like renewable energy, energy efficiency, and sustainability. They discussed promising green careers, how different sectors can work together toward sustainable development goals, and successful solutions currently being implemented to reduce energy use and carbon emissions.
Arlington Chamber Presentation_3_31_16 Janine Barbara and Bill CombinedJanine Finnell
The document summarizes a presentation given by Janine Finnell of Leaders in Energy to the Green Business Committee of the Arlington Chamber of Commerce. The presentation provided an overview of Leaders in Energy, including its mission to build a community of leaders to enable sustainable solutions. It discussed the organization's activities like events, partnerships with other organizations, and international outreach. It also profiled some of Leaders in Energy's business members and their work in areas like sustainable business practices and the bioeconomy.
Demetra J. McBride has extensive experience leading sustainability initiatives for local governments. As the founding Director of Santa Clara County's Office of Sustainability, she secured over $5.5 million in grant funding and established the County as a leader in climate action. She also led a successful federal stimulus energy program, solidifying $2 million in funding. Previously as Natural Resources Project Manager for Sarasota County, she created a $23 million capital project plan and managed grant-funded programs. Her achievements include developing regional climate adaptation and zero-emissions transportation plans as well as a model for local government clean energy funding.
The US-Mexico border is in the news every day and policy decisions in both countries have lasting implications for energy and environmental law. We are pleased to invite to you to an information-packed conference for professionals working on energy and environmental law issues across the US-Mexico border region. Get the latest updates from leading experts representing all points of view on current cross-border issues
This document provides an agenda for the 2014 California Transportation Choices Summit held in Sacramento, California on April 21-23, 2014. The summit included pre-summit bike tours on April 21st, a main summit on April 22nd featuring panels, keynotes, and breakout sessions on topics like cap-and-trade funding and reforming Caltrans, and an optional advocacy day on April 23rd. Speakers included Senators, non-profit directors, and other experts. The goal of the summit was to discuss opportunities to support climate protection, social equity, and transportation choices in California transportation policies and investments.
Access to clean, sustainable supplies of water is essential for the operation and growth of Canada’s major natural resource sectors — energy, mining, forest, and agriculture. The health of our ecosystems is also dependent upon those same clean, sustainable water supplies, creating the potential for competing uses. Canada’s apparent water abundance masks a looming scarcity challenge for our important natural resource sectors and for certain regions of our country.
Changing Currents is the result of over a year of research and engagement involving some of the country’s leading experts on water management and policy, and collaboration with key industry representatives and associations.
This document provides an introduction and overview of the book "Electricity reform: social and environmental challenges". It contains 11 chapters written by various contributors on topics related to power sector reform experiences in different countries and regions, and strategies for promoting social and environmental goals through electricity reform. The introduction acknowledges that while the need for electricity is important for development, the environmental implications of rising electricity consumption in developing countries requires integrating environmental and social aspects into power sector reforms. The contributors include academics and experts from organizations like the UN Environment Programme and research institutes focused on energy and environment.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
2. 2
GreenGov is a White House Council on Environmental Quality initiative focused on federal energy and
sustainability efforts. The 2015 GreenGov Symposium has been organized to bring together senior Ad-
ministration officials and Federal sustainability stakeholders to discuss the March 2015 Executive Order,
number 13693: Planning for Federal Sustainability in the Next Decade.
3. 3
GreenGov 2015 Participants,
Thank you for participating in today’s event and joining the conversation to discuss strategies
to green the supply chain, improve water management, reduce greenhouse gas emissions and
waste, and increase energy efficiency and renewable sources.
The White House Council on Environmental Quality and the George Washington University
are committed to being a resource and partner in your efforts to build a more sustainable federal
government. We hope that today serves as both an educational opportunity and inspiration for
you to take back to your respective departments and agencies. Moreover, please count on us to
support your ideas and sustainable practices year-round.
Thank you to our partners – HP, United Soybean Board, Verizon, Duke Energy, C2ES and TapIt
– without whom today’s event would not be possible. Our partners join us in our commitment to
create a sustainable future.
We look forward to collaborating with each of you. Thank you for being a part of GreenGov
2015.
Sincerely,
Kathleen A. Merrigan, Ph.D.
Executive Director of Sustainability
George Washington University
Kate Brandt
Federal Chief Sustainability Officer
Council on Environmental Quality
4. 4
AGENDA
8:30-9:00 Registration
9:00-9:15 Welcome
Frank Sesno, Director of the GW School of Media and Public Affairs and Creator of PlanetForward.org
9:15-9:30 Opening Remarks
Christy Goldfuss, Managing Director, White House Council on Environmental Quality
9:30-10:00 Overview of E. O. 13693
Kate Brandt, Federal Chief Sustainability Officer, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Q&A moderated by Kathleen Merrigan, Executive Director of Sustainability, George Washington University
10:00-10:45 The Clean Dream: Achieving 30% Clean Energy by 2025
Moderator: Amit Ronen, Director, GW Solar Institute
Tim Unruh, Director, Federal Energy Management Program, DOE
Beth Viola, Senior Policy Advisor, Holland & Knight
John Kliem, Deputy Director, Secretary of the Navy’s Renewable Energy Program Office
Shawn Heath, Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer, Duke Energy
10:45-11:00 Campus Voices on the Urgency of Climate Change
Sabrina McCormick, Associate Professor, GW Milken Institute School of Public Health
Ellie Davis, Rising GW Senior and Sustainability Minor
Lynn Goldman, Dean of the GW Milken Institute School of Public Health
11:00-11:30 Keynote: Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus
Introduction by Marilyn Crouther, Senior Vice President and General Manager,
HP Enterprise Services U.S. Public Sector
11:30-11:45 Aligning Our Event with our Mission
Meghan Chapple, Director, GW Office of Sustainability
Anand Shantam, Instructor at the Culinary Job Training Program, DC Central Kitchen
Johan Van Walsem, Chief Operating Officer, Metabolix
Heidi Bonnaffon, Environmental Planner, Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
11:45-12:00 Morning Wrap-Up
Frank Sesno, Director, GW School of Media and Public Affairs and Creator PlanetForward.org
12:00-1:00 Luncheon
1:15-1:30 Managing Change: Views of Former Deputy Secretaries
Kathleen Merrigan, Executive Director of Sustainability, George Washington University
Bob Perciasepe, President, Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES)
5. 5
1:30-2:00 Fleet Dynamic Dialogue
Moderator: Janet Peace, Senior Vice President of Policy and Business Strategy, C2ES
Tom Day, Chief Sustainability Officer, USPS
Kevin Vincent, Chief Counsel, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, DOT
Robert Graham, Director, EV Everywhere Challenge, DOE
Ryan Swann, Director of Data Analytics, Office of Government-Wide Policy, GSA
2:00-2:30 Keynote: EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy
“Cutting Carbon Pollution Drives Smart Investment”
2:30-2:40 A Conversation on Biobased
Karen Edwards, Consultant, United Soybean Board
Ruben Rojas, Deputy Executive Director, California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank
2:40-3:15 High Performance Sustainable Buildings and Net Zero
Moderator: Daniel Kreeger, Executive Director, Association of Climate Change Officers
Ken Sandler, Sustainability & Green Building Advisor, GSA
John Saams, Director of Business Development for Energy Services, Siemens Corporation
Wanda Johnsen, Sustainability Planner, Office of the Deputy Asst. Secy. of the Army for Energy and Sustainability, DOD
Jimmy Nguyen, Food & Nutrition Service, USDA
3:15-4:00 Building a Sustainable Supply Chain
Moderator: Robert McNamara, Managing Director, Accenture - Strategy and Sustainability Practice
Michael Fitzpatrick, Head of Regulatory Advocacy and Senior Counsel, General Electric
Katherine Neebe, Director of Sustainability, Walmart
Nate Hurst, Global Director, Environmental and Living Progress, HP
David Asiello, Program Manager, Sustainability and Environmental Technology, Office of the Asst. Secy. of Defense
(Energy, Installations & Environment), DOD
4:00-4:40 Less is More: Achieving Energy Efficiency
Moderator: Ekundayo Shittu, Assistant Professor, Department of Engineering Management & Systems Engineering
Kathleen Hogan, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency, DOE
Katy Hatcher, EPA Energy Star National Manager for Public Sector
Jeff Sherman, Director, Federal Energy & Sustainability Services, Schneider Electric
Landon Van Dyke, Senior Advisor for Energy, Environment & Sustainability, State Department
4:40-4:50 Moving Forward Together
Christine Harada, Acting Chief of Staff, Associate Administrator, Office of Government-Wide Policy, GSA
4:50-5:00 Closing Remarks
Kate Brandt, Federal Chief Sustainability Officer, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Kathleen Merrigan, Executive Director of Sustainability, George Washington University
5:00-6:15 Networking Reception
8. 8
FeaturedSpeakers
kate Brandt
Christy goldfuss
Federal Chief Sustainability Officer, White House Council on Environmental Quality
Managing Director, White House Council on Environmental Quality
On April 23rd, 2014 Kate E. Brandt was appointed to the White House Council on Environmental Quality by President
Obama, where she serves as the Administration’s first Federal Chief Sustainability Officer. In this capacity, she is
responsible for promoting environmental and energy sustainability across Federal Government operations including
360,000 buildings, 650,000 vehicles, and $445 billion annually in purchased goods and services. Prior to her
appointment, Brandt served as a Senior Advisor at the U.S. Department of Energy in the Office of the Under Secretary for
Science and Energy where she played a key role in establishing the office and executing the President’s Climate Action
Plan. Before that, she was a Director for Energy and Environment in the Office of Presidential Personnel at the White
House. Prior to her work in the Office of Presidential Personnel, Brandt served as the Special Advisor for Energy to the
Secretary of the Navy. She advised the Secretary on Navy energy policy and strategy and was the policy director for the
report to the President entitled America’s Gulf Coast: A Long Term Recovery Plan after the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill.
Christy Goldfuss serves as Managing Director at the White House Council on Environmental Quality. CEQ helps to
develop the Administration’s environmental and energy policies and initiatives and works closely with Federal agencies
to implement them. Goldfuss helps oversee implementation of the President’s Climate Action Plan and works with other
White House partners on new strategies to tackle this global challenge. She also leads work to advance the President’s
agenda for protecting the lands and waters Americans value. Goldfuss has significant experience as a leader on a range
of environmental issues, most recently as Deputy Director of the National Park Service where she helped lead efforts to
set and meet strategic goals related to conservation and preservation of America’s natural and cultural heritage. In this
capacity, she identified ways to make Federal resources more accessible, including by spearheading the Administration’s
“Every Kid in a Park” initiative. Prior to joining the Administration, Goldfuss created and directed the Public Lands Project
at the Center for American Progress. Previously, she worked as legislative staff for the House Committee on Natural
Resources and as a reporter in Richmond, VA; Reno, NV; and Redding, CA.
ray mAbus
Secretary, U.S. Navy
Ray Mabus is the 75th United States Secretary of the Navy and leads America’s Navy and Marine Corps. Mabus is
responsible for conducting the affairs of the Department of the Navy, including recruiting, organizing, equipping, training
and mobilizing. Additionally, he oversees the construction and repair of naval ships, aircraft, and facilities, and formulates
and implements policies and programs consistent with national security policies. Mabus is responsible for an annual
budget in excess of $170 billion and leadership of almost 900,000 people. Mabus directed the Navy and Marine Corps to
change the way they use, produce and acquire energy, and set an aggressive goal that no later than 2020, the Navy and
Marine Corps obtain at least 50% of their energy from alternative sources. The Navy demonstrated the Great Green Fleet
in 2012, a carrier strike group in which every participating U.S. Navy ship and type of aircraft operated on alternative
energy sources including nuclear energy and biofuels. In June 2010, President Obama appointed Mabus to prepare the
long-term recovery plan for the Gulf of Mexico in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill. Mabus’ report was released
in September 2010 and met with broad bi-partisan support with most recommendations passed into law by Congress as
the Restore Act. Included was a fund to aid in the Gulf Coast’s recovery by distributing 80 percent of any civil penalties
awarded as a result of the damage caused by the disaster. To date, civil penalties total more than one billion dollars. Before
his appointment, Mabus served as Governor of Mississippi (1988-1992), the youngest elected to that office in more than
150 years. Mabus was Ambassador to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (1994-1996) and later was Chairman and CEO of a
manufacturing company. In 2013, he was named one of the top 50 highest rated CEOs by Glassdoor, the only leader of
a federal agency to receive this award. Secretary Mabus is a native of Ackerman, Mississippi, and received a Bachelor’s
Degree, summa cum laude, from the University of Mississippi, a Master’s Degree from Johns Hopkins University, and a
Law Degree, magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School. After Johns Hopkins, Mabus served in the Navy as an officer
aboard the cruiser USS Little Rock.
9. 9
FeaturedSpeakers
Kathleen Merrigan
Bob Perciasepe
Executive Director of Sustainability, George Washington University
President, Center for Climate and Energy Solutions
Kathleen Merrigan is Executive Director of Sustainability at the George Washington University, where she leads the GW
Sustainability Collaborative, GW Food Institute, and serves as Professor of Public Policy. Merrigan is co-chair of AGree,
Board Director of Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture and Food Corps, and steering committee member of the
Council of Environmental Deans and Directors of the National Council for Science and the Environment. Merrigan was
Deputy Secretary and COO of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (2009-2013), where she led the Know Your Farmer,
Know Your Food Initiative to support local food systems, was a key architect of First Lady Michelle Obama’s “Let’s Move!”
campaign, and was the first woman to chair the Ministerial Conference of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations. Prior to USDA, Merrigan was a professor at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts
University, Administrator of the USDA Agricultural Marketing Service, and served on the U.S. Senate Committee on
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry, where she wrote the law establishing national standards for organic food. Merrigan
holds a Ph.D. in environmental planning and policy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a MPA from the
University of Texas, and a B.A. from Williams College. Time Magazine named Merrigan among the “100 most influential
people in the world” in 2010.
Bob Perciasepe is President of the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, an independent voice for policy and action
to address the challenges of energy and climate change. Perciasepe has been an environmental policy leader in and
outside government, most recently as Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. He is an expert
on environmental stewardship, natural resource management, and public policy. While Perciasepe served as Deputy
Administrator from 2009 to 2014, EPA set stricter auto emissions and mileage standards, increased protections for the
nation’s streams and rivers, and developed carbon emissions standards for power plants. Perciasepe was previously
assistant administrator for the agency’s water and clean air programs, leading efforts improve the safety of America’s
drinking water and lower sulfur levels in gasoline to reduce smog. In 2002, Perciasepe joined the National Audubon Society
as its senior vice president for public policy. He was the group’s chief operating officer from 2004 to 2009, and worked to
protect wetlands and expand environmental education. He has served as Secretary of the Environment for the state of
Maryland and as a senior planning official for the city of Baltimore. Perciasepe is a member of the U.S. Export-Import Bank
2015 Advisory Committee and the National Research Council Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology. He holds a
master’s degree in planning and public administration from the Maxwell School of Syracuse University and a Bachelor of
Science degree in natural resources from Cornell University.
Gina McCarthy
Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Gina McCarthy is the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Appointed by President Obama in 2009
as Assistant Administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, Gina McCarthy has been a leading advocate for common-
sense strategies to protect public health and the environment. Previously, McCarthy served as the Commissioner of the
Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. During her career, which spans over 30 years, she has worked at
both the state and local levels on critical environmental issues and helped coordinate policies on economic growth, energy,
transportation and the environment. McCarthy received a Bachelor of Arts in Social Anthropology from the University
of Massachusetts at Boston and a joint Master of Science in Environmental Health Engineering and Planning and Policy
from Tufts University. When she is not in D.C., McCarthy lives in the Greater Boston area with her husband and dog, just a
short bike ride away from their three children, Daniel, Maggie, and Julie.
10. BIOGRAPHIES
10
David Asiello - Program Manager, Sustainability and
Environmental Technology Office of the Assistant
Secretary of Defense (Energy, Installations &
Environment), U.S. Department of Defense
David Asiello currently provides technical and policy
support to the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Energy,
Installations & Environment). Asiello’s areas of
responsibility include overseeing DoD Environmental
Technology Programs; leading development and
implementation of the DoD Sustainability Plan; Integrating
Sustainable Procurement Policy and maximizing
the use of Green Products at DoD Installations; and
integrating Environment, Safety, and Occupational Health
considerations into Weapon Systems Acquisition Programs.
Asiello has been with the Office of the Secretary of Defense
(OSD) since March 2000. Prior to coming to the Secretary
of Defense Office, Asiello held a variety of logistics,
operations & maintenance, and environmental positions
for the Chief of Naval Operations, and for the Commander,
Naval Air Systems Command. Asiello received a Bachelor
of Science Degree in Aerospace Engineering from Auburn
University 1986, his Master of Business Administration
Degree from Marymount University in 1990, and is a 2003
graduate of the National Defense University with a Master
of Science Degree in National Resource Strategy and Senior
Acquisition Certification from the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces. In 2008, Asiello graduated from the Defense
Leadership and Management Program and from the Federal
Executive Institute.
Heidi Bonnaffon - Environmental Planner,
Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
Heidi Bonnaffon has been an environmental planner for
the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments
(COG’s) Department of the Environment since August 2005.
COG’s members include the District of Columbia and 21
surrounding cities and counties in Maryland and Virginia.
Bonnaffon’s work focuses on improving the water quality
of the Potomac and Chesapeake Bay, as well as managing
the Community Engagement Campaign. This campaign
is a local government and utility partnership to promote
wise water use, and tap water via the TapIt program. Prior
to her work at COG, Bonnaffon was a Program Associate
for the National Association of County and City Health
Officials (NACCHO) in Washington, DC. Bonnaffon
also served as an Environmental Education Peace Corps
Volunteer in Senegal, Africa and as an AmeriCorps VISTA
volunteer in Milwaukee, WI. Bonnaffon received her M.S. in
Conservation Biology and Sustainable Development and her
B.S. in Zoology, both from University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Meghan Chapple - Director Office of Sustainability,
Senior Advisor on University Sustainability Initiatives
George Washington University
Meghan Chapple is Director of the Office of Sustainability,
Senior Advisor on University Sustainability Initiatives,
and Co-Chair of the Innovation Task Force at The George
Washington University (GW). She brings expertise on
business strategy, innovation, organizational change, and
sustainability education. Since Ms. Chapple launched the
Office, GW has integrated sustainability into operational
and academic activities under the leadership of President
Steven Knapp. She has facilitated the acceleration of GW’s
sustainability practices, including the Capital Partners
Solar Project (52 MW). She has formed fruitful partnerships
across the public and private sectors, and designed and
taught an MBA course Strategies for Sustainable Enterprise.
Prior to GW, Ms. Chapple was Director of Client Services
at SustainAbility where she advised corporate clients
from around the world on sustainability solutions. She
has managed projects for the business education network
at World Resources Institute (WRI), including the global
business school ranking Beyond Grey Pinstripes. Ms.
Chapple served in Americorps with Public Allies on the
south side of Chicago to build local green businesses and
economic capacity. She has an MBA in Corporate Strategy
and a Masters of Science in Environmental Policy from the
University of Michigan, and a BA in Environmental Science
from Northwestern University.
Marilyn Crouther Senior Vice President & General
Manager, U.S. Public Sector, Enterprise Services,
Hewlett-Packard Company
Marilyn C. Crouther is Senior Vice President and
General Manager of HP Enterprise Services U.S. Public
Sector (USPS). Under her leadership, thousands of USPS
professionals with deep industry knowledge and technical
expertise bring together the applied power of HP to deliver
outcomes that matter for clients in the defense, homeland
security, healthcare, intelligence, civilian, state and local
markets. Crouther joined HP Enterprise Services in 1989
and has since held various positions, including chief
financial officer for USPS. Crouther holds a bachelor’s
degree in professional accountancy from Mississippi State
University, is a Texas-licensed CPA, and holds a graduate
certificate from Southern Methodist University where she
completed the Finance Executive professional program. She
also attended the Thunderbird International Consortium
II at the Garvin School of International Management. She
was named to GovCon Exec’s Washington 100 and Federal
Computer Week’s 2014 Fed 100. She serves on the Boards of
Directors for the Northern Virginia Technology Council and
11. BIOGRAPHIES
11
TechAmerica’s Public Sector. ExecutiveBiz named her one
of 2010’s Top 10 Chief Financial Officers to Watch, and the
Northern Virginia Technology Council recognized her as
Group/Division Chief Financial Officer of the Year in 2010.
The national Women of Color organization honored her with
its Professional Achievement Award in 2007.
Eleanor Davis - Student Leader
George Washington University
Starting with hikes through the Pennsylvania State Parks
and dinnertime lobster dissections, Ellie has always been
passionate about the environment. As an Environmental
Studies major with Sustainability and GIS minors, her
passion is reflected in her academic pursuits. From studying
abroad on the SIT Sustainability and Environmental
Action Program in Australia to organizing GW’s annual
Earth Day Fair, she always tries to learn from and engage
other students in conversations around environmental
issues no matter how big or small. Her current projects
are organizing GW’s flagship UNFCCC simulation which
will gather university students from across the country to
simulate the climate negotiations that will occur in Paris,
bringing together organizations such as The American
Red Cross and the World Food Program USA; as President
of the GW Humanitarian Mapping Society; and teaching
7th and 8th grade students in Washington, D.C.’s Ward 8
to use open source mapping for community development.
Ellie is looking forward to a busy year at GW and applying
to Geography PhD programs so that she can help find
solutions to the many problems that face our planet due to
climate change.
Thomas Day - Chief Sustainability Officer
United States Postal Service
Thomas Day was named Chief Sustainability Officer in June
2011. Day leads the USPS effort of being a sustainability
leader by creating a culture of conservation throughout
the Postal Service and leading the adoption of sustainable
business practices. Day’s group sets policies and assists
implementation in areas of Environmental Compliance,
Sustainability, and Energy Initiatives. Day formerly served
as Chairman of the Standards Board for the Universal
Postal Union (2007-2011). Additionally, Day was senior
vice president, Intelligent Mail and Address Quality (2007-
2011) and senior vice president, Government Relations
(2005-2007) and vice president, Engineering (2001-2005).
During his 31-year Postal Service career, Day developed
an operations background from various assignments in
delivery, distribution, and logistics, including service as
district manager of the Southeast New England District
from 1996 to 2000. He is a third-generation employee
entering the Postal Service as a management associate in
the Northeast Region in 1984 following five years’ service as
an officer in the U.S. Army. Day graduated from U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, earning a BS degree in engineering
in 1978. He represented the Postal Service as a Sloan Fellow
at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Business,
earning a MSc degree in management in 1996.
Karen Edwards - Consultant United, Soybean Board
Karen Coble Edwards is the principal of KCE Public
Affairs Associates. KCE represents the United Soybean
Board on biobased products as well as consults to the
National Biodiesel Board in support of America’s First
Advanced Biofuel. As a result, government agencies are
transitioning away from petroleum-based products to
greater use of rapidly renewable plant materials that benefit
the environment as well as economy. Karen also represents
the Biobased Products Coalition in Washington, D.C. to
represent companies and associations with a common
interest in the development and promotion of policies that
advance the production, marketing, and sale of biobased
products. Raised on a Missouri farm, Karen is pleased to
have also supported global food security through more than
20 years of international agricultural development activities
in developing countries throughout the world. Karen is a
board member of the Congressional Hunger Center as well
as the Transportation Energy Partners.
Michael Fitzpatrick - Head of Regulatory Advocacy and
Senior Counsel, The General Electric Company (GE)
Michael Fitzpatrick is Head of Regulatory Advocacy and
Senior Counsel for Government and Regulatory Affairs
at General Electric Company, where he coordinates and
develops regulatory strategy and advocacy across GE’s
business groups. He handles advocacy on international
regulatory cooperation and standards issues. He Co-
Chairs the U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s Working Group
on International Regulatory Cooperation and Standards,
sits on the Board of the Canadian American Business
Council, and the Business Coalition for Transatlantic Trade,
and serves on the U.S. government’s International Trade
Advisory Committee. Previously, Fitzpatrick served as the
Associate Administrator of the Office of Management and
Budget’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs. He
helped lead the Obama Administration’s development of
regulatory policy and White House review of significant
Executive Branch regulatory action. In 2009, President
Obama appointed Fitzpatrick to the Governing Council of
the Administrative Conference of the United States. Prior
to joining the Obama Administration, Fitzpatrick served
on the Obama Presidential Transition, as a partner at the
12. BIOGRAPHIES
12
law firm of Akin Gump, as an Assistant U.S. Attorney, and
in the Clinton White House. Fitzpatrick graduated, with
distinction, from Stanford Law School. He received his M.A.
in American History from the University of Virginia and his
B.A. from Brown University.
Lynn Goldman - Dean, Milken Institute School of Public
Health, George Washington University
Lynn R. Goldman, a pediatrician and an epidemiologist, is
the Michael and Lori Milken Dean of George Washington
University Milken Institute School of Public Health.
Formerly she was a Professor at the Johns Hopkins
University Bloomberg School of Public Health Department
of Environmental Health Sciences. In 1993, Goldman was
appointed as Assistant Administrator for the EPA, where
she directed the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention (1993-1998). She has a BS in Conservation of
Natural Resources, an MS in Health and Medical Sciences
from the University of California, Berkeley, an MPH from
the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, and
an MD from the University of California, San Francisco.
She completed pediatric training at Children’s Hospital,
Oakland, California and is board-certified in pediatrics.
Goldman is a member of the Institute of Medicine Council,
vice chairman of the Institute of Medicine Roundtable on
Environmental Health Sciences, a member of the NAS
Board on Environmental Sciences and Toxicology and a
member of the NAS Report Review Committee. She serves
as a member of the FDA Science Board and the Advisory
Council to the Director of the CDC. She is a member of the
Board of Trustees of the Environmental Defense Fund.
Robert Graham - Director, EV Everywhere Challenge,
U.S. Deparment of Energy
Director, EV Everywhere Challenge, US Department
of Energy, responsible for the DOE’s initiatives to
increase market penetration of plug-in electric vehicles.
Upon retirement from Southern California Edison in
January 2014, where he served as a member of the SCE
transportation electrification program, Bob has supported
the market expansion of plug in electric vehicles as a part
time consultant. Engagement in the PEV market space
includes 10 years at the Electric Power Research Institute
and five years at SCE. Primary focus has been on the
development and testing of plug in vehicles, federal and
state policies that support PEV expansion and establishment
of an appropriate level of EV education and infrastructure
around the nation with recent focus on Southern California’s
many local municipalities.
Christine J. Harada, Acting Chief of Staff, U.S. General
Services Administration
Christine J. Harada is the Acting Chief of Staff of the U.S.
General Services Administration. Previously, she served
the agency as the Associate Administrator for Government-
wide Policy. Harada helps provide government-wide policies
and guidance to enable the sustainable and efficient use of
assets, effective acquisition leadership, identity management
and sound information management.Previously, Harada
worked at The Boston Consulting Group and Booz Allen
Hamilton, where she was a consultant to Fortune 500
and public sector clients, helping them tackle their most
pressing challenges. At BCG, Harada was responsible for
building and providing oversight for a team focused on
transforming businesses, and supported global operations
across 78 offices. At Booz Allen Hamilton, she was a leader
in the firm’s commercial and government business, and was
recognized for providing organizational strategy, strategic
planning, and performance management services to clients
across the Intelligence Community. Harada was educated at
the Wharton School and Lauder Institute at the University of
Pennsylvania, where she received both an MBA in Finance
and an M.A. in International Studies with a focus on East
Asia and Japanese language, at Stanford University, where
she received an M.S. in Aeronautics and Astronautics,
and at MIT, where she received a B.S. in Aeronautics and
Astronautics.
Caterina Hatcher - ENERGY STAR Public Sector National
Manager, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Caterina (Katy) Hatcher is the US EPA’s ENERGY STAR
Public Sector National Manager. She works with public
sector organizations, such as government agencies and
schools, to help improve energy performance through
the use of ENERGY STAR tools and resources, including
ENERGYSTAR Portfolio Manager. Katy has been working
for EPA since 1996. She holds a degree from the University
of Virginia’s School of Architecture in City Planning. By
the end 2014, more than 400,000 properties have been
benchmarked in Portfolio Manager, representing more
than 40 percent of the nation’s commercial building space.
Portfolio Manager has become the standard national
platform for benchmarking energy use in commercial
buildings in the United States and Canada. It has been
adopted for use by leading US commercial real estate, retail,
healthcare, and educational organizations. Many local
governments incorporate Portfolio Manager into state and
local mandatory benchmarking laws.
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13
Shawn Heath - Vice President and Chief Sustainability
Officer, Duke Energy
Shawn Heath serves as vice president and chief
sustainability officer for Duke Energy. He is responsible
for the company’s sustainability-related goal setting,
reporting, internal programs, and outreach with external
stakeholders. He was named to his current position in
January 2012. Heath joined Duke Energy in 2001. He
has held a variety of positions, including director of state
energy policy and vice president of outreach and advocacy
for the company’s regulated operations in North and South
Carolina. Prior to joining Duke Energy, Heath was employed
by Arthur Andersen from 1994 to 2001, providing both
audit and management consulting services. From 1993 to
1994, he served as an accountant for Beverly Enterprises.
Heath earned a Bachelor of Science degree in accounting
from Virginia Tech. He also holds a Master of Business
Administration degree from Yale University.
Kathleen Hogan - Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy
Efficiency, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy, U.S. Department of Energy
Dr. Kathleen Hogan is the Deputy Assistant Secretary
for Energy Efficiency in the Office of Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy (EERE). She oversees a more than
$600 million annual energy efficiency policy, program,
and research portfolio including advanced manufacturing,
buildings, federal energy management, low income
weatherization, and intergovernmental partnerships. As
part of EERE’s senior leadership, she helps to implement
and achieve national energy efficiency goals, including
those laid out in the President’s Climate Action Plan. Before
this position, she served for more than 10 years as the
Division Director at EPA responsible for the development
and operation of EPA’s clean energy programs focused
on removing market barriers for energy efficiency and
renewable energy. Under her management, ENERGY
STAR grew to a national brand for energy efficiency across
products, new homes, and buildings. Hogan’s work has
been recognized with a Presidential Rank Award, induction
into the Energy Efficiency Hall of Fame of the U.S. Energy
Association, and for being a contributor to the Nobel Peace
Prize awarded to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. She has a Ph.D. from the Department of Geography
and Environmental Engineering at the Johns Hopkins
University and a BS in Chemistry from Bucknell University.
Nathan Hurst - Global Director, Environmental and
Living Progress, Hewlett-Packard (HP) Company
Nate Hurst is currently the Global Director of
Environmental Progress and Chief of Staff for HP’s Living
Progress Initiatives team. He drives environmental
sustainability and social innovation programs aligned with
HP’s business strategy. Hurst directs the strategy of a global
team of experts focused on solving environmental and
social issues in collaboration with non-profit organizations,
governments, customers and partners. His goal is to create
sustainable solutions that address societal challenges in the
areas of education, global health, and the environment that
showcase HP’s technology. Hurst leads the environmental
progress team, supporting and driving the development
of the company’s environmental strategy and advancing
HP’s environmental and energy initiatives around the
world. Previously, Hurst served as director of sustainability,
public affairs and government relations for Walmart where
he executed a proactive internal and external business
sustainability strategy on environmental issues. As a
national spokesperson for The Ocean Conservancy, he
spearheaded big ideas, communications strategies, and
goals for environmental advocacy and advanced policy
agendas through government relations. He also previously
served on The White House Council on Environmental
Quality for President Clinton. Hurst received his master’s
degrees from the University of California – Berkeley and his
bachelor’s degree from Virginia Tech University.
Wanda Johnsen - Sustainability Planner,
Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army
(Energy & Sustainability), U.S. Department of Defense
Wanda Johnsen is a sustainability planner in the Office
of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army (Energy
& Sustainability) [ODASA(E&S)] in Washington, DC.
She provides policy development and oversight for Army
sustainability initiatives and compliance with Federal and
DoD sustainability mandates, including high-performance
buildings and Net Zero Waste. She also leads the Army
Climate Change Work Group, represents the Army on
the DoD Climate Change Adaptation Work Group, and
coordinates the Army’s reporting to the annual DoD
Strategic Sustainability Performance Plan. Johnsen has
supported DoD environmental programs for over 20 years,
including positions with the Army, Air Force, and as a
DoD consultant. She began her career in state regulatory
agencies, and helped craft some of the earliest State
legislation establishing sustainability requirements (e.g.,
aquifer life goals, soil loss limits). Johnsen holds a BS and an
MS in Soil Science from the University of Nebraska.
Capt. John Kliem - Deputy Director, Secretary of the
Navy’s Renewable Energy Program Office, U.S. Navy
Captain Kliem is currently assigned as the Deputy Director
for the Secretary of the Navy’s Renewable Energy Program
14. BIOGRAPHIES
14
Office. He has served in the Navy Civil Engineer Corps for
25 years in positions of increasing authority in construction
management, contingency construction and public works
management. Most recently he served as the Chief of Staff
to the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations
and Environment and as the Base Operations Support
Director for Commander Navy Installation Command. He
graduated from Texas A&M University with a BS in Civil
Engineering and holds a MSc degree in Environmental
Engineering from Penn State and a MSc degree in National
Strategic Resources from the Industrial College of the
Armed Forces.
Daniel Kreeger - Executive Director, Association of
Climate Change Offices
Daniel Kreeger is co-founder of the Association of Climate
Change Officers (ACCO) and has a unique familiarity of
key climate and sustainability leaders at and efforts by most
Fortune 500 companies, higher education institutions and
North American government entities. Dan has led ACCO’s
programming efforts, as well as establishment of the CCO
Certification, the first comprehensive climate change
credentialing program for executives across sectors. Dan
led ACCO’s partnership with the White House Council on
Environmental Quality in 2011 and 2012 to co-produce their
flagship conference on sustainability in Federal agency
operations, the GreenGov Symposium, and has been a co-
founding steering committee member for the consortium
that jointly administered EPA’s Climate Leadership Awards
from 2012-2015.
An accomplished business executive with more than 15
years of cross-functional experience in change management
and enterprise business strategies within business-to-
business, government, and consumer-centric sectors, Dan
focuses specifically on the human capital, economic and
operational implications of environmental and public health
issues. Dan serves on the Dean’s Council of Advisors at the
FIU College of Architecture and the Arts, and frequently
lectures at top sustainability focused graduate and executive
education programs.
Sabrina McCormick - Associate Professor, Milken
Institute School of Public Health, George Washington
University
Sabrina McCormick, PhD is a sociologist and filmmaker
who takes an in-depth, mechanistic approach to
understanding how climate change gets under the skin. She
works on extreme impacts of climate-related phenomena
like heat waves, emergent vector-borne disease, and
climate-related disasters. She recently served as a Lead
Author on the Special Assessment of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change entitled Managing the Risks of
Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change
Adaptation. In addition to directing other films, she was
a Producer on The Years of Living Dangerously, an eight-
part Showtime series that earned the Emmy Award for Best
Documentary in 2014. McCormick has advised Congress,
the State Department, and the White House on climate
change issues. She is currently Associate Professor in the
Environmental and Occupational Health Department in
the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George
Washington University. She is the author of the books No
Family History: Finding the Environmental Links to Breast
Cancer and Mobilizing Science: Movements, Participation
and the Remaking of Knowledge. She has also authored over
thirty articles and book chapters. She completed her PhD in
Sociology at Brown University in 2005.
Robert McNamara - Managing Director, Accenture
Strategy and Sustainability
Robert McNamara is a Managing Director in Accenture
Strategy and our North America Sustainability Practice. Mr.
McNamara focuses on helping commercial and public sector
organizations, with a concentration on Federal government,
develop and implement strategic sustainability initiatives
that support growth, improve competitiveness, manage risk,
and create value across stakeholder groups. Mr. McNamara
has over 15 years management consulting experience and
has advised clients across industries in both North America
and Europe. He has advised corporations, government
agencies, and multi-lateral entities develop strategies,
improve their organization and operational performance,
develop new capabilities, reduce costs, and create
transformation programs that drive social, environmental,
and financial benefits. Prior to joining Accenture, Mr.
McNamara worked at JP Morgan Chase Bank and
the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. Mr. McNamara
has Bachelor of Arts in Economics from Northwestern
University and a Master in Business Administration from
the University of Chicago Booth School of Business with
concentrations in Strategy, Finance, and International
Business. He is based in Washington, DC.
Katherine Neebe - Director of Sustainability, Stakeholder
Engagement, Walmart
Katherine Neebe joined Walmart’s sustainability team
in June 2013 and leads Walmart’s external stakeholder
relationships, focused on key partnerships with non-profit
organizations, government agencies and multi-stakeholder
alliances. She also manages and responds to pressing and
emerging sustainability issues for the company. Previous
to Walmart, Neebe spent six years at WWF managing
15. BIOGRAPHIES
15
one of the world’s largest corporate-NGO partnerships,
a $24MM sustainability-driven initiative with The Coca-
Cola Company. The focus of the partnership was to
conserve iconic river basins, improve the efficiency of
the company’s water use, decrease the company’s carbon
dioxide emissions, and support sustainable agriculture
and packaging. Neebe played a central role in the 2011
“Arctic Home” campaign in which Coca-Cola changed
the packaging of 1.4B cans to raise awareness and over
$3.8MM for polar bear conservation. Over the 3-month
promotion, public support of the need to protect polar bear
habitat increased by 37%. Neebe has worked with a range
of corporate, government, and nonprofit organizations.
Weaving together her intensive business experience and
commitment to social and environmental responsibility,
she brings a practical ability to ground sustainability
into actionable terms. Neebe received her MBA from The
Darden School at UVa in 2004 and has a BA in English from
Colorado College.
Jimmy Nguyen - Office of the Chief Communications
Officer, Food and Nutrition Service U.S. Department of
Agriculture
Jimmy Nguyen works for the USDA Food and Nutrition
Service, where part of his role is to promote food waste
reduction, recovery, and recycling activities in school
cafeterias. Jimmy is also a part-time farmer and home
builder in Fauquier County, Virginia, where he tries to
employ sustainable techniques to reduce consumption and
increase fertility.
Janet Peace - Senior Vice President, Policy and Business
Strategy, Center for Climate and Energy Solutions
Janet Peace is the Vice President of Markets and Business
Strategy at the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions
(C2ES). She manages the center’s Business Environmental
Leadership Council (BELC), the largest U.S.-based
association of companies devoted to climate-related policy
and corporate strategies. The BELC contains mainly Fortune
500 companies with combined revenues of over $2 trillion
and more than 3.5 million employees. She also manages the
center’s resilience program and its analysis of market-based
policy options. Dr. Peace brings more than 20 years and a
wide spectrum of experience on environmental issues to her
work at C2ES. As a recognized expert on climate policy, she
is a member of the National Research Council’s Roundtable
on Climate Change Education and the Council of Canadian
Academies on oil sands environmental technologies. Prior
to C2ES, Dr. Peace worked on climate policy in Alberta and
taught environmental and natural resource economics at
the University of Calgary. She also worked as a resource
specialist with the U.S. General Accounting Office and as a
geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey. She holds a Ph.D.
and Master of Science in economics and an undergraduate
degree in geology.
Ruben Rojas - Deputy Executive Director, California
Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank (IBank)
Ruben Rojas was appointed by Governor Jerry Brown as the
Deputy Executive Director of the California Infrastructure
and Economic Development Bank (IBank) in July 2013. He
is responsible for the State of California’s general purpose
funding authority managing a $38 billion portfolio of funds
specific for infrastructure and economic development
projects. This executive position administers the following
programs for the State of California: the Infrastructure
State Revolving Fund, the Lending for Energy and
Environmental Needs (CLEEN Center), the Small Business
Loan Guarantee Program, and the Conduit Bond Program.
Rojas has held executive positions with some of the largest
public agencies and private sector firms in California. He
is an accomplished, results driven executive with more
than 25 years of progressive experience, and has gained a
reputation for creating long-term value for public agencies,
their constituents as well as for private sector businesses.
Ruben has an exceptional history of triangulating between
multiple stakeholders (state, federal, county, municipal
and regulatory agencies and public-private partnerships)
to ensure economic development, market penetration of
sustainable products, program and project advancement
and growth.
Amit Ronen - Director, GW Solar Institute, George
Washington University
Amit Ronen is the Director of the GW Solar Institute and
a Professor at the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy &
Public Administration at the George Washington University.
He focuses on the economic, technical, and public policy
issues associated with solar energy. Prior to this position,
Ronen served as Deputy Chief of Staff to U.S. Senator
Maria Cantwell, leveraging her membership on the Energy,
Finance, and Commerce Committees to help enact clean
energy tax incentives, financing instruments, and research
and development authorizations that catalyzed hundreds
of billions of dollars of new energy related investments.
He was a key strategist behind the landmark Cantwell-
Ensign bipartisan clean energy tax incentives package
that established the eight-year Investment Tax Credit and
removed the $2,000 cap on residential solar installations.
Ronen also authored Senator Cantwell’s innovative
bipartisan climate bill, the CLEAR Act, which offered a
centrist alternative to divisive cap-and-trade proposals.
16. BIOGRAPHIES
16
Previously, Ronen held positions at the U.S. Department of
Energy’s Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy,
the U.S. Department of Transportation, and the Council on
Environmental Quality. Ronen received his undergraduate
degree from Pomona College and a Masters in Public
Affairs from Princeton University. Both degrees focused on
Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy.
John Saams - Director of Business Development for
Energy Services, Siemens Governement Technologies
John Saams is Director of Business Development for
Energy Services at Siemens Government Technologies
where he brings more than 25 years of consulting,
program management and capture experience in energy,
environmental, safety and fire protection programs. Prior
to joining Siemens, Saams served as a Senior Account
Executive at NORESCO where he was responsible for
customer satisfaction and specialized in Army Energy
Savings Performance Contracts. Earlier, Saams was a Senior
Associate at Booz Allen Hamilton where he was responsible
for leading technical support projects and program support
for both Federal and commercial clients. His primary clients
included Department of Energy, U.S. Postal Service, U.S.
House of Representatives, Federal Aviation Administration
as well as a wide range of other civilian and defense
agencies. Prior to Booz Allen, Saams was Vice president
of a small woman-owned business specializing in fire
protection and system safety consulting services. Saams
is a Professional Engineer and holds various credentials
including Certified Energy Manager, LEED AP. He holds a
B.S. in Engineering from University of Maryland, College
Park and has recently pursued graduate work in sustainable
energy.
Ken Sandler - Sustainability and Green Building Advisor,
Office of Federal High-Performance Green Buildings,
U.S. General Services Administration
As Sustainability and Green Building Advisor for the
General Services Administration (GSA), Office of Federal
High-Performance Green Buildings, Ken Sandler manages
applied research, identifies best practices, and coordinates
outreach to green the Federal building portfolio. His
research at GSA has included analyzing energy efficiency
options for Fort Carson Army Base as part of the Army’s
Net Zero Initiative and green roof benefits and challenges.
Sandler serves as Co-Chair of the Interagency Sustainability
Working Group (ISWG), facilitates GSA’s Green Building
Advisory Committee, and represents GSA to the President’s
Pollinator Health Task Force. Sandler brings over 20 years’
experience in sustainability, including as Founder and
Co-Chair of EPA’s Green Building Workgroup. In 2003, he
drafted a report on Federal green building that has served
as the basis for Federal legislation. He also helped develop
the Guiding Principles for Federal Leadership in High-
Performance and Sustainable Buildings, several Executive
Orders and two major research agendas. Sandler graduated
cum laude in English and Political Science from University
of Illinois (1986), attained a Master’s in Political Science
from University of North Carolina (1989), and is currently
pursuing a PhD in Environmental Science and Policy from
George Mason University. He is a One-Day Jeopardy!
Champion (1999).
Frank Senso - Director, School of Media and Public
Affairs, George Washington University
Frank Sesno is director of the School of Media and Public
Affairs (SMPA) at the George Washington University.
He is an Emmy-award winning journalist and creator of
PlanetForward.org, a user-driven web and television project
that highlights innovations in sustainability. He hosts
the Planet Forward Salon Series focusing on topics such
as energy policy and food production. As SMPA director,
Sesno leads a faculty of world-class professors who research
and teach journalism, political communication, and the
impact of digital media in international affairs. Sesno
teaches classes on environmental multimedia reporting,
ethics in journalism, documentary and ‘the art of the
interview.’ Sesno’s career spans more than three decades,
including 21 years at CNN where he served as White House
correspondent, anchor, and Washington Bureau Chief. He
has interviewed five U.S. presidents and literally thousands
of political, business and civic leaders — ranging from
Hillary Clinton and Benjamin Netanyahu to Bill Gates and
Walter Cronkite. Before joining CNN, Sesno worked as a
radio correspondent at the White House and in London for
the Associated Press. He awards include an Emmy, several
cable ACE awards, and an Overseas Press Club Award. He
has a Bachelor of Arts degree in American History from
Middlebury College.
Anand Shantam - Instructor, Culinary Job Training
Program DC Central Kitchen
Anand Shantam was out of the workforce for 25 years before
she joined DC Central Kitchen’s Culinary Job Training
Program in December 2011. Battling addiction most of
her life, Shantam was rarely able to hold a steady job,
constantly dependent on family and friends and in deep
financial trouble. Shantam says finding her passion at DC
Central Kitchen changed her life; “Discovering that I was
good at something, people started relying on me and I felt
I had value.” After graduating, Shantam was hired by The
Kitchen to work in the school foods program which every
17. 17
day provides 6300 scratch-cooked, locally-sourced meals in
city schools. She recently accepted a new challenge and is
an instructor in the same program that helped put her back
on her feet. She now teaches students at DC Central Kitchen
the necessary knife and life skills they need to secure jobs
in kitchens across the city. DC Central Kitchen is a nonprofit
organization working to fight poverty, hunger, and poor
health through a number of innovative programs, including
meal distribution and job training. DCCK mission is to use
food as a tool to strengthen bodies, empower minds, and
build communities.
Jeff Sherman - Director, Federal Energy & Sustainability
Services, Schneider Electric
Jeff Sherman is the Director of Federal Energy &
Sustainability Services for Schneider Electric. His team
provides the U.S. Federal Government with comprehensive
energy management lifecycle solutions – including energy
and sustainability strategic planning, advanced metering,
energy conservation and/or renewable energy generation,
energy management systems, and laboratory and data
center efficiency solutions – many of which are funded by
energy savings performance contracts (ESPCs) and utility
energy service contracts (UESC). Mr. Sherman holds a
Master of Business Administration from Wake Forest
University and a Bachelor of Business Administration
degree cum laude from Texas Christian University. He is
based in Dallas/Ft. Worth, Texas.
Ekundayo (Dayo) Shittu - Assistant Professor,
Department of Engineering Management & Systems
Engineering, George Washington University
Ekundayo Shittu is an assistant professor in the Department
of Engineering Management and Systems Engineering at
the George Washington University. He completed his Ph.D.
degree in Industrial Engineering & Operations Research at
the Mechanical and Industrial Engineering Department,
University of Massachusetts Amherst. Dr. Shittu conducts
basic and applied research that take a systems approach
to address different dimensions of decision making under
uncertainty on the management and economics of energy
technology, the design and impacts of climate change
response policies.
Ryan Swann - Director of Data Analytics, Office
of Government-wide Policy, U.S. General Services
Administration
Ryan Swann currently serves as the Director of Data
Analytics in GSA’s Office of Government-wide Policy where
he focuses on increasing the value and quality of federal
data to better inform decision-makers. His primary goal is
to translate data into knowledge that can be used to help
the Federal government run more efficiently and ultimately
save money for the American taxpayer. Prior to joining GSA
in February of 2014, Ryan worked at the U.S. Department
of the Treasury in the Office of the Chief Information
Officer where he helped to develop and implement business
intelligence solutions. Ryan is a veteran of the U.S. Marine
Corps, having served a tour of duty in Iraq, and a graduate
of the University of Maryland. Ryan holds a Master Black
Belt in Six Sigma and is currently pursuing an MBA from
the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.
Tim Unruh - Program Director, Federal Energy
Management Program, U.S. Department of Energy
Timothy Unruh, Ph.D., PE, Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design Accredited Professional (LEED
AP), Certified Energy Manager (CEM), Certified Software
Development Professional, is director of the Federal Energy
Management Program (FEMP). As FEMP Director, Unruh
oversees the implementation of policy and actions that
result in energy efficiency implementation, renewable
energy adoption, and reductions in energy and water
use in federal operations. Unruh was formerly director
of operations for ConEdison Solutions, where he led a
team of engineers and project managers to implement
energy savings projects within government and private
installations. While in this role, Unruh educated energy
users about alternative financing to achieve energy-
reduction goals. He was involved in the measurement and
verification of energy savings from these projects. Earlier in
his career, Unruh built a program to provide energy services
to industrial clients. He trained these clients about methods
to produce energy savings in a short financial payback
environment. During his career, Unruh has performed
assessments, project analyses, and energy engineering
services for an array of facilities. He helps develop electrical
power quality standards with the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers Power Quality Subcommittee. Unruh
has doctoral, master’s, and bachelor’s degrees in electrical
engineering from Wichita State University.
Landon Van Dyke - Senior Advisor, U.S. Department of State
Landon Van Dyke currently serves as the executive
coordinator of the State Department’s environmental,
energy and sustainability efforts as well as its lead on
outreach and engagement on related issues. Previously,
Mr. Van Dyke served on the White House Council on
Environmental Quality as the Associate Director of
International Affairs and Climate Change. In this capacity
he advised the Council Chair and was responsible for
leading the Executive Office of the President international
18. BIOGRAPHIES
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environment and energy policy team, coordinating policy
as it related to U.S. international relations and negotiating
multilateral agreements. Mr. Van Dyke holds a bachelor in
Anthropology from Central Michigan University, an MBA
from Western Michigan University and a MA in Asian
Studies from George Washington University. Prior to
joining the federal government, Mr. Van Dyke served as the
Senior Managing Associate at Pacific Bridge, Inc., and has
worked in China for several years serving as an educator
and business consultant.
Johan Van Walsem - Chief Operating Officer, Metabolix
Johan van Walsem, chief operating officer since July 2013,
returned to Metabolix in August 2009 as vice president of
strategy and commercial development, following a 16 month
period as senior vice president, R&D and bioprocessing
at Joule Biotechnologies, a clean technology start-up
company. Previously, Mr. van Walsem served as our vice
president of manufacturing, development and operations
from October 2003 until April 2008, and was our director
of manufacturing and development from September 2001
to October 2003. Before joining Metabolix, Mr. van Walsem
was senior biochemical engineer with Montec Research, a
division of Resodyn Corporation, where he was responsible
for fermentation technology development. Prior to that, Mr.
van Walsem worked with AECI Bioproducts in South Africa
in technology management and new product development.
Mr. van Walsem received a master’s degree in Chemical
Engineering from the University of Pretoria (South Africa)
and an M.B.A. from the University of South Africa. He is
a registered professional engineer with the Engineering
Council of South Africa and a senior member of AIChE
(American Institute of Chemical Engineers).
Kevin Vincent - Chief Counsel, National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation
Mr. Vincent was appointed Chief Counsel of the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration in July 2009. Prior
to his appointment, he practiced government-contract law
for 15 years at the law firm of Baker Botts in Washington,
DC. He previously practiced law at firms in Rockville,
Maryland, and Birmingham, Alabama. He began his legal
career in 1986 as an Air Force Captain, working as an
advisor to Air Force General Counsel at the Pentagon. Mr.
Vincent received a B.S. in electrical engineering from the
University of Alabama, and his J.D. from the University of
Alabama School of Law, where he was a Hugo Black scholar
and a member of the Alabama Law Review. Mr. Vincent is
a member of the Alabama and Washington, DC, Bars; the
Public Contract Law and Administrative Law sections of the
American Bar Association; and the Institute of Electrical
and Electronics Engineers.
Beth Viola - Senior Policy Advisor, Holland & Knight
Beth A. Viola is a senior policy advisor at Holland & Knight
and co-chairs the firm’s energy practice. Beth focuses her
practice on energy and environmental advocacy, and has
extensive experience creating and implementing energy
policy strategies and initiatives, first as a federal official and
in her current role at Holland & Knight. Ms. Viola formerly
served as a senior advisor to the White House Council on
Environmental Quality during the Clinton Administration,
and was responsible for advising the president and the vice
president on energy and environmental issues. She also
served as the primary White House liaison with elected
officials, industry, environmental, labor, and other leaders
on issues including climate change, natural resources and
smart growth. During her last year, she was one of Vice
President Gore’s chief environmental advisors, and served
as a senior policy advisor during his presidential campaign.
She also served as a senior advisor for energy and
environmental policy with the John Kerry for President and
the Kerry-Edwards campaigns and served as a facilitator for
climate change discussions at the Clinton Global Initiative
from 2006-2008. She currently chairs George Washington
University’s Planet Forward Advisory Board