Advisory Board

Hashem Akbari, Concordia University
Dian Grueneich, Dian Grueneich Consulting
Catherine Hunt, Dow Chemical Company
Gregory Kats, Good Energies
Laurie Kerr, Natural Resources Defense Council
Ronnen Levinson, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Arthur Rosenfeld, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Stephen Wiel, Collaborative Labeling and Appliance Standards Program
John Wilson, The Energy Foundation

Hashem AkbariHashem Akbari
Dr. Akbari is a Building, Civil, and Environmental Professor and Research Chair at Concordia University in Montreal, Canada, a post he has held since June 2009. At Concordia, Dr. Akbari teaches courses in engineering and urban energy and environment and continues his research in urban heat islands and mitigation technologies. He is also developing research programs in building automation and demand response. Prior to joining Concordia University he was the founding Group Leader of the Heat Island Group, a Senior Scientist, and a principal investigator in the Environmental Energy Technologies Division at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

During his tenure, the Heat Island Group conducted several experimental and simulation studies to quantify the energy saving potentials of cool roofs and shade trees, performed meteorological and air-quality simulations to characterize the air quality benefits of heat island mitigation technologies, collaborated with leading roofing materials manufacturers to produce advanced cool roofing materials, and worked with many agencies and organizations to develop related codes and standards for implementation of heat island technologies. Some notable contributions include: assisting the California Energy Commission and California utilities to develop cool roof rebate programs; leading efforts to incorporate cool roof provision in the ASHRAE building energy efficiency standards 90.1 and 90.2; leading efforts to incorporate cool roof provisions in the California Title 24 building energy efficiency standards; helping cities and states to develop cool roof standards; and assisting air quality management districts to develop heat island mitigation guidelines for improving ambient air quality. Dr. Akbari also initiated the creation of the Cool Roof Rating Council, a non-profit organization which measures, rates and labels the optical properties of roofing material surfaces, and is currently serving on its board.

Dr. Akbari earned his Ph.D. (1979) in engineering and M.Sc. (1978) in industrial engineering and operation research from the University of California, Berkeley (1979, 1978). He has also holds a M. Sc. in nuclear engineering from MIT (1977) and a B. Sc. is in gas engineering from the Abadan Institute Technology (1971).

Dian GrueneichDian Grueneich
Dian Grueneich is a nationally and internationally recognized energy expert, with 35 years’ experience. Her expertise covers energy efficiency, demand response, smart grid, renewable energy resources, transmission, and climate change. She has extensive experience in all facets of energy policy and regulation, utilities, market development and innovation, and key factors driving U.S. and global energy investments.

Dian served as a Commissioner on the California Public Utilities Commission from 2005-2010 and led its efforts on energy efficiency, developing the California Long-Term Energy Efficiency Strategic Plan and overseeing a 40% expansion of California’s energy efficiency funding, resulting in a 3-year, $3.8 billion program, the largest efficiency program in the U.S. Dian also streamlined California’s transmission siting process and led the successful permitting of three major new transmission lines to carry renewable energy, a $6 billion in new energy infrastructure now under construction. Dian initiated the California Renewable Energy Transmission Initiative (RETI), helped launch the Western Renewable Energy Zone Initiative (WREZ), and served as the first Chair of the Western Governors’ Association’s Demand Side Management Committee for Western transmission planning.

Dian’s professional recognitions include the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE) 30th Anniversary Award for outstanding contribution in the field of energy efficiency, the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners’ Clean Energy Award, eeGlobal Forum’s first “Visionary Award” for energy leadership, and ACEEE’s National Champion of Energy Efficiency Award.

Dian currently serves on the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Electricity Advisory Committee, the DOE-EPA State Energy Efficiency Action Plan Leadership Group, the Leadership Council of the China-U.S. Energy Efficiency Alliance, the Advisory Council of Stanford University’s Precourt Energy Institute, and the Advanced Energy Economy Advisory Board. Dian also serves as a Clean Energy Education & Empowerment U.S. Ambassador.

Dian is a graduate of Stanford University and holds a J.D. from Georgetown University.

Catherine HuntCatherine Hunt
Dr. Hunt is R&D Director in Innovation Sourcing & Sustainable Technologies at The Dow Chemical Company. Dr. Hunt is actively building collaboration teams across Dow with universities, companies, national labs and government agencies (esp., DOE and DOD) focused on accelerating the pace of innovation. Dr. Hunt began her career as a senior scientist in analytical research at Rohm and Haas in 1984 after completing an NIH Postdoctoral Fellowship at Yale University. During her 25 years at Rohm and Haas, Dr. Hunt held positions of increasing responsibility, from research scientist to process chemist to plant laboratory manager to Director of their worldwide Analytical and Computational Competency Network (better known as ACNET) and ultimately, Corporate Sustainability Director and Leader for Technology Partnerships.

Dr. Hunt holds an A.B. in Chemistry (Cum Laude) from Smith College and a Ph.D. in Chemistry from the University of California, Davis. She was the 2007 President of the American Chemical Society where she championed education, collaboration and innovation, especially related to the Sustainability of Energy, Food and Water.

Dr. Hunt serves on several advisory boards including: Rochester Institute of Technology National Technical Institute for the Deaf, Mayor Nutter’s Sustainability Advisory Board for the City of Philadelphia, and the National Academies Roundtable for the Science and Technology of Sustainability. She is a member of American Chemical Society, American Association for the Advancement of Science, the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Sigma Xi and the New York Academy of Science.

Dr. Hunt is especially proud of the RetroFIT Philly “Coolest Block” Contest project with the City of Philadelphia, the Energy Coordinating Agency of Philadelphia, The Dow Chemical Company and The Dow Foundation. For details visit: www.retrofitphilly.com.

Over her professional career, Dr. Hunt has received numerous awards; she was named one of the “Best 50 Women in Business” in Pennsylvania by Governor Rendell (2007), received the Smith Medal from her alma mater’s Board of Trustees (2008), was selected as the Outstanding Alumna from the University of California, Davis (2009), and was elected as a Fellow by the AAAS (2007) and, more recently, she was in the inaugural class of Fellows of the American Chemical Society (2009).

Gregory KatsGregory Kats
Mr. Kats is Venture Partner at Good Energies a multi billion-dollar global clean energy investor, where he leads investments in the energy efficiency and green building areas, and is President of Capital E, a national clean energy advisory practice. He recently introduced and helped negotiate $100 million strategic investment by St. Gobain in Sage. Mr. Kats developed a partnership with TIAA-CREF establishing $50 million VC investment vehicle within TIAA’s real estate group to invest behind Good Energies’ energy efficiency and green building investments. Mr. Kats also guides Good Energy’s portfolio firms on leveraging legislation and programs at DOE, DOD and EPA, including recently guiding a portfolio firm in securing a $90 million DOE loan guarantee. He serves on a half dozen boards and is Sustainability Advisor to CalPERS.

Mr. Kats served for 5 years as the Director of Financing for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy where he led national programs to develop and deploy renewable energy, energy efficiency and advanced building technologies. He initiated and led DOE’s successful effort to persuade the SEC to lift key restrictions on domestic and international expansion of US energy service companies. He was the Founding Chair of the International Performance Measurement & Verification Protocol (IPMVP), which has served as the technical basis for $10 billion in building upgrades and been translated into 10 languages. Earlier in his career, Greg held senior management and marketing positions in London, Paris and Geneva.

Mr. Kats is a founder of the American Council on Renewable Energy (ACORE), and the New Resource Bank. He is the Founding Chair of the Energy and Atmosphere Technical Advisory Group for LEED, and is the Founding Chair of the National Chapter of the US Green Building Council. He was the Principal Advisor in developing Green Communities, now the national green affordable housing design standard, used as the green design basis for over 20,000 units of green affordable housing.

Mr. Kats earned a MBA from Stanford University and, concurrently, an MPA from Princeton University (where he studied with Ben Bernanke) and a BA from UNC with highest honors as a Morehead Scholar. He is a Certified Energy Manager and a LEED AP. Greg was a principal author of Green Office Buildings: A Practical Guide to Development (ULI, 2005), and is the author of the Greening Our Built World: Costs, Benefits and Strategies (Island Press, 2010). He is a frequent keynote speaker at national clean-energy technology, venture capital, and real estate conferences.

Laurie KerrLaurie Kerr
Laurie Kerr works at the Natural Resources Defense Council, where she promotes large-scale energy efficiency policies American cities. Until recently, she was the Deputy Director for Energy Efficiency in the New York City Mayor’s Office, where she was instrumental in the crafting of PlaNYC, New York’s plan for sustainable growth through 2030, and in the development of the city’s green building and energy efficiency policies, which lead the nation. She has over 15 years’ experience practicing architecture. Prior to receiving her Master’s in Architecture from Harvard, Laurie earned degrees in engineering and applied physics. She was given the AIANY Public Architect Award for 2011.

Ronnen LevinsonRonnen Levinson
Dr. Levinson is the Deputy Leader of the Heat Island Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, CA. Dr. Levinson has developed cool roofing and paving materials, improved methods for the measurement of solar reflectance, and helped bring cool roof requirements into building energy efficiency standards. He holds a B.S. in engineering physics from Cornell University (Ithaca, NY) and an M.S. and a Ph.D. in mechanical engineering from the University of California at Berkeley. Dr. Levinson has authored or co-authored over 40 publications.

Art RosenfeldArthur Rosenfeld
Dr. Rosenfeld received his Ph.D. in Physics in 1954 at the University of Chicago under Nobel Laureate Enrico Fermi, and then joined the Department of Physics at the University of California at Berkeley. There he joined, and eventually oversaw, the Nobel prize-winning particle physics group of Luis Alvarez at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) until 1974. At that time, he changed his research focus to the efficient use of energy, formed the Center for Building Science at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and led it until 1994.

From 1994 to 1999 Dr. Rosenfeld served as Senior Advisor to the U. S. Department of Energy’s Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy. In 2000 California Governor Gray Davis appointed him Commissioner at the California Energy Commission, and in 2005 he was re-appointed by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. He was responsible for the Public Interest Energy Research program, with an annual budget of $82 M; for Energy Efficiency, including the California energy efficiency standards for buildings and for appliances; and collaborated with the California Public Utilities Commission to oversee California’s Energy Efficiency Program with an annual budget of $1 billion. He retired from the CEC in January, 2010.

Dr. Rosenfeld is the co-founder of the American Council for an Energy Efficiency Economy (ACEEE), and the University of California’s Institute for Energy and the Environment (CIEE).

He is the author or co-author of nearly 400 refereed publications, received the Szilard Award for Physics in the Public Interest in 1986, the Carnot Award for Energy Efficiency from the U.S. Department of Energy in 1993 and the Berkeley Citation in 2001 from the University of California. He is most proud to have received in 2006 the Enrico Fermi Award, the oldest and one of the most prestigious science and technology awards given by the U.S. Government.

Steven WielStephen Wiel
Dr. Wiel is an engineer with forty-nine years of experience dealing with various energy and environmental matters. Dr. Wiel retired from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) in 2005 and is currently serving as the President of the Board of the Collaborative Labeling and Appliance Standards Program (CLASP), an organization which grew out of a collaborative partnership that he initiated at LBNL in 1996 to stimulate the use of energy efficiency standards and labels worldwide. He also is currently serving as the Nevada Representative of the Southwest Energy Efficiency project (SWEEP).

From 1992 to 2005, he worked for the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, where he served as Head of the Energy Analysis Department at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL). During his career at LBNL he also established LBNL’s Washington Office, served as senior advisor to the US Department of Energy on integrated resource planning and demand-side management in the utility sector, led the greenhouse gas mitigation component of the U.S. Country Studies Program, and created the initiative on international energy efficiency standards and labels that evolved into CLASP.

For the eight years prior to joining LBNL, Dr. Wiel was a Public Service Commissioner, regulating the prices and conduct of Nevada’s investor-owned utility companies. For seven years before that, he owned an energy and environmental planning firm in Reno, and was a part-time Engineering Professor at University of Nevada, Reno. He served as the Chairman of NARUC’s Conservation Committee for four years, contributing significantly to the development of electric and gas utility companies’ integrated resource planning, their investment in demand-side management, incentives for conservation profitability, and environmental accounting. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy.

Dr. Wiel has Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in Chemical Engineering from Stanford University, and a Doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. He has published 151 books, articles, reports and papers on the subject of energy efficiency and the environment. He has served as a member of teams advising officials in Pakistan, the Philippines, Indonesia, Japan, China, Australia, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Romania, the Russian Federation and Mexico, and has otherwise travelled extensively in his work.

John WilsonJohn Wilson
Mr. Wilson is the Buildings Program Director at the Energy Foundation. Prior to joining the Energy Foundation, he was an economist and commissioner advisor at the California Energy Commission from 1977 to 2008. His activities emphasized developing new appliance efficiency standards, oversight of the Commission’s $80 million per year Public Interest Energy Research program, and developing long-term scenarios for California’s energy system. He was a winner of the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy’s “Champion of Energy Efficiency” award in 2006 for his work on increasing the efficiency of appliance power supplies. Mr. Wilson was a founding board member of the New Buildings Institute. He has B.A. and M.A. degrees in economics from the University of California (Berkeley and Davis).