The U.S. Tech for Climate Action conference featured close to 200 delegates and a notably diverse forum of speakers. The conference successfully explored concepts, ideas, challenges and opportunities as to how the U.S. can advance ambitious programs by embracing innovation and technology led by a steadfast vision from multiple stakeholders across government, city, venture capital, industry and technology. Additionally, the conference recognized that there is a big global effort required and the U.S. is ready to be a leader using technology and innovation advancements to combat climate change.
The key focuses included:
C-Level / Owner – 23%
Director & VP – 28%
Head of – 7%
Manager – 17%
Advisor – 14%
Other – 13%
Sheldon Whitehouse has earned a reputation in the Senate as a fierce advocate for progressive values and a thoughtful legislator capable of reaching across the aisle to achieve bipartisan solutions. Senator Whitehouse has been at the center of bipartisan efforts to pass laws overhauling federal education policy, rebuilding our nation’s infrastructure, reforming the criminal and juvenile justice systems, protecting Americans from toxic chemicals in everyday products, and addressing ocean plastic waste. Recognizing the devastating toll of addiction in Rhode Island and across the nation, Whitehouse authored the first significant bipartisan law to address the opioid crisis, the Comprehensive Addiction and Recovery Act. Representing the Ocean State, Whitehouse plays a key role in crafting policies addressing climate change, environmental protection, and a price on carbon. He passed into law a dedicated fund to support ocean and coastal research and restoration and bipartisan legislation to confront the crisis of marine plastic and other waste polluting our oceans. He has worked to enact bipartisan measures to reduce carbon pollution and boost America’s clean energy economy. Whitehouse has stood as a staunch defender of Social Security and Medicare, and has made improving care and reducing costs in our health care system a hallmark of his career. To counteract the corrosive effects of special interests in our democracy, Whitehouse has championed efforts to root out dark money from our elections and make Congress and the courts accountable to the American people. “While fighting in Washington against corporate interests and their influence on the political process,” wrote the Providence Journal, “Senator Whitehouse has not forgotten the people back home.” A graduate of Yale University and the University of Virginia School of Law, Sheldon served as Rhode Island’s U.S. Attorney and state attorney general before being elected to the Senate, where he serves on the Finance Committee, the Judiciary Committee, the Environment and Public Works Committee, and the Budget Committee. He and his wife Sandra, a marine biologist and environmental advocate, live in Newport. They have two grown children.
Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, now in her fifteenth term as the Congresswoman for the District of Columbia, is the Chair of the House Subcommittee on Highways and Transit. She serves on two committees: the Committee on Oversight and Reform and the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure.
Before her congressional service, President Jimmy Carter appointed her to serve as the first woman to chair the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. She came to Congress as a national figure who had been a civil rights and feminist leader, tenured professor of law, and board member at three Fortune 500 companies. Congresswoman Norton has been named one of the 100 most important American women in one survey and one of the most powerful women in Washington in another. The Congresswoman’s work for full congressional voting representation and for full democracy for the people of the District of Columbia continues her lifelong struggle for universal human and civil rights.
Congresswoman Norton’s accomplishments in breaking barriers for her disempowered district are matched by her success in bringing home unique economic benefits to her constituents. Among them are senatorial courtesy to recommend federal judges, the U.S. Attorney, and other significant federal law enforcement positions for the District; up to $10,000 per year for all D.C. high school graduates to attend any public U.S. college or university and up to $2,500 per year to many private colleges and universities; a unique $5,000 D.C. homebuyer tax credit, which has sharply increased home ownership in the District and was a major factor in stabilizing the city’s population; and D.C. business tax incentives, including a significant wage credit for employing D.C. residents, which has maintained businesses and residents in the District.
Congresswoman Norton also has brought significant economic development to the District of Columbia throughout her service in Congress, creating and preserving jobs in D.C. The most significant are her work in bringing to D.C. the U.S. Department of Homeland Security headquarters compound, now under construction, and is the largest federal construction project in the country; her bill that is developing the 55 acre-Southeast Federal Center, the first private development on federal land; her work that resulted in the relocation of 6,000 jobs to the Washington Navy Yard; and her successful efforts to bring to the District the new headquarters for the U.S. Department of Transportation, and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, along with an additional Metro station at New York Avenue, which has resulted in the development of the NOMA neighborhood.
Congresswoman Norton helped end the city’s most serious financial crisis in a century, in the 1990’s,by achieving a historic package that for the first time restructured the financial relationship between Congress and the District, by transferring $5 billion in unfunded pension liabilities and billions more in state costs to the federal government.
The Congresswoman, who taught law full time before being elected, is a tenured professor of law at Georgetown University, teaching an upper-class seminar there every year. After receiving her bachelor’s degree from Antioch College in Ohio, she simultaneously earned her law degree and a master’s degree in American Studies from Yale University. Yale Law School has awarded her the Citation of Merit for outstanding alumni, and Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences has awarded her the Wilbur Cross Medal for outstanding alumni, the highest awards conferred by each on alumni. She is the recipient of more than 50 honorary degrees.
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Mariannette’s father was a Master Sergeant in the United States Air Force who was forced to take up extra work, sometimes two or three jobs, to support their family. Her mother, who did not have a high school education, also worked multiple jobs.
Mariannette originally dreamed of becoming a teacher because she loved school and wanted to share her passion for learning with others. However, in 10th grade, she was severely burned in a kitchen fire. While at the hospital, Mariannette was treated by a physical therapist who went out of her way to make sure she got better. This woman’s kindness and selflessness inspired her to become a doctor so she could help others.
Mariannette was the fourth of eight children and since her parents did not have the means to pay for college, she left home at 16 and enrolled in community college. She later enlisted in the United States Army at 18, where she served for 24 years as a private, nurse, and doctor (ophthalmologist or eye diseases/surgery.) She went into private practice in Ottumwa in 1997 and she has remained there with her husband, Curt.
Mariannette has two grown children, Jonathon and Taylor. In 2010, Governor Terry Branstad appointed her as the Director of the Iowa Department of Public Health where she served until 2014.
In 2018, the voters of Senate District 41 elected Mariannette to fight for them in the Iowa State Senate. She resigned from the state senate on January 2, 2021 to take her seat in the United States House of Representatives.
Mariannette is a member the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, where she sits on the Subcommittee on Health and the Subcommittee on Environment, Manufacturing, and Critical Minerals, as well as the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, where she serves as Chairwoman of the Subcommittee on Health.
Commissioner Geoffrey Starks believes that communications technology has the potential to be one of the most powerful forces on Earth for promoting equality and opportunity. To unlock that potential, however, all Americans must have access. From combatting internet inequality to advocating for diversity in employment, entrepreneurship, and media ownership, Commissioner Starks fights for policies designed to ensure that modern communications technology empowers every American.
Because high-quality broadband is essential to participating in our economy and society, Commissioner Starks has been a champion for the millions of Americans who lack access to or cannot afford a home internet connection. As a native Kansan, he understands the communications needs of rural America. He has consistently advocated for broadband deployment that helps rural communities tap into economic and educational opportunities that may not be close to home, which both encourages young people to stay and attracts new residents and employers.
Bringing a wealth of enforcement experience to the Commission, Commissioner Starks advocates for consumer protection and accountability, particularly in managing the Universal Service Fund. Before he was appointed Commissioner, Starks helped lead the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau, handling a wide variety of complex investigations. At the Department of Justice, he served as a senior advisor to the Deputy Attorney General on a variety of domestic and international law enforcement matters and received the Attorney General’s Award for Exceptional Service—the highest honor award a DOJ employee can receive.
Commissioner Starks is also a leader on national security policy, working to eliminate untrustworthy equipment from America’s communications networks. His Find It, Fix It, Fund It initiative brought national attention to the urgent need to support small and rural companies as they work to make their networks more secure. With regard to personal data security, while Commissioner Starks fully supports the promise of advanced wireless service and other cutting-edge technologies—and works to ensure that all communities share in the benefits of these advancements—he also fully appreciates the potentially intrusive powers of some communications technologies and is vigilant to ensure against any uses of those powers that would promote illegal discrimination or compromise personal privacy.
Before he entered federal public service, Commissioner Starks practiced law at Williams & Connolly, clerked on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit, served as a legislative staffer in the Illinois State Senate, and worked as a financial analyst. Commissioner Starks graduated from Harvard College with high honors and Yale Law School. He lives in Washington, D.C. with his wife, Lauren, and their two children.
Dr. Vanessa Z. Chan is the Chief Commercialization Officer for the Department of Energy and Director of the Office of Technology Transitions. In this role she is responsible for all commercialization activities across DOE, the 17 National Laboratories, and the Department’s other research and production facilities across the country.
She is an innovator who has worked across a wide range of ecosystems, from academia to Fortune 1000 companies to startups. She has two decades of experience helping organizations grow at the interface of technology and business, across a diverse set of industries.
Chan is currently on a leave of absence from her position as Undergraduate Chair of the Materials Science & Engineering department and the Jonathan and Linda Brassington Professor of Practice in Innovation & Entrepreneurship at the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. At Penn she was redesigning how engineers are being educated by formally incorporating real world skills (understanding of supply chains & ecosystems, presentation skills, etc.) to better prepare her students to have an impact when they graduate.
She is a former McKinsey & Company partner, experienced Venture Board Director for Vanguard and United Technology Corporation, and a board member at multiple startups. Chan was the first woman and the first East Asian elected partner in McKinsey’s North American Chemicals practice. She is a nationally respected educator who is the first Practice Professor at Penn’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, awarded an endowed scholarly chair.
Chan earned her Ph.D. in Materials Science & Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and her B.S.E. in Materials Science & Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania.
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Research and Innovation; and Chief Science Officer, U.S. Department of Transportation
Shelby Rust Busó, Chief Sustainability Officer, City of San Diego
Akshay Malik, Smart Cities Director, City of Philadelphia
Daniel Conner is the Chief of Staff of the Department of Energy and Environment and is responsible for agency oversight and management of over 450 employees. Daniel has a breadth of experience at local, national, and international levels; he has two terms of legislative experience working for then Councilmember Tommy Wells, was a Field Director for President Barack Obama’s first campaign, as well as other mayoral and legislature campaigns. Most recently, Daniel has been a key player for DC’s involvement in C40, manages international relations for the agency, organized an international delegation to Brussels and Copenhagen, the creation and implementation of the DC Green Bank, and managing external stakeholders and intergovernmental affairs for various environmental issues for the District. His office is responsible for performance management, overseeing complicated development related matters, application and management of stimulus dollars, and driving Kingman Island environmental education opportunities.
Beyond any professional accomplishments, Daniel’s real skill is his ability to connect people together to reach a common goal and produce results. Daniel began his career in DC in 2005 when he moved from Alabama to complete an internship for his graduate degree. He has a Bachelor of Science degree from Auburn University (War Eagle!) and a Master’s Degree in Social Work with a concentration in Public Policy from the University of Alabama. He lives on Capitol Hill with his wife Melissa, his daughter Lola, his son Ramsey, and their pit-bull rescue dog, Gus. Daniel and his family enjoy recreating outdoors, especially on the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers, and experiencing the amazing food and music scene in DC.
Sasha Mackler directs the Energy Program at the Bipartisan Policy Center. He has worked for more than two decades at the intersection of energy policy and commercial markets. Prior to leading the Energy Program, he spent nearly 10 years in the private sector, first as vice president of Summit Power Group’s carbon capture business and then overseeing market development activities for Enviva, the largest biomass fuel supplier to the global utility industry. His professional work has focused on the innovations necessary to scale emerging energy technologies along with developing the business models and policy frameworks that support the deployment of low carbon energy systems.
Earlier in his career, Mackler played a key role in BPC’s first project as the Research Director at the National Commission on Energy Policy (NCEP), which produced a comprehensive set of policy recommendations many of which were incorporated into the 2005 Energy Policy Act. He subsequently launched BPC’s energy innovation portfolio, including the formation of the American Energy Innovation Council. Mackler has managed a number of energy policy projects on topics such as tax incentives, federal RD&D, finance, workforce transition, carbon capture and storage, low carbon fuels, cap and trade, climate impacts and adaptation, and geoengineering research. Prior to his work with NCEP, he was an analyst in the Clean Air Markets Division at the Environmental Protection Agency.
Mackler holds both a Master of Science in Earth Resources Engineering and Master of Public Administration from Columbia University. He earned his Bachelor of Science in Geomechanical Engineering from the University of Rochester.
David Lieberman is Bentley Systems’ US Government Relations Director and advocates in front of Congress, the executive agencies, and state governments for a digital transformation in our nation’s infrastructure. Before coming to Bentley, David was an Associate at Webster, Chamberlain & Bean, LLP, and Counsel to Sen. Susan Collins (R-ME) and Michael Burgess (R-TX) where he focused on transportation and infrastructure policy. David lives in Bethesda, MD, with his wife and three young children.
Pascale has over 25 years of combined legislative, executive branch and private sector experience developing and implementing public policy with a focus on innovation, vehicle safety, manufacturing, and transportation policy. At Audi, Pascale works to advance federal and state policies that will accelerate the safe deployment of automated vehicle technologies. She engages and informs elected officials on vehicle technologies, develops and advises on public policy and legislative initiatives, builds and expands stakeholder coalitions, and initiates innovative approaches to prioritize vehicle safety. She is immediate past Chair of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation Technology, Innovation, and Mobility Policy Committee, and current Chair of CTA’s Self-Driving Vehicle Working Group.
Prior to coming to Audi, Pascale was Director of Governmental Affairs, Policy and Strategic Planning at the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). In her senior leadership position at NHTSA, Pascale developed and implemented initiatives to reform the agency; played a key role in developing agency guidance on highly automated vehicles; and implemented changes to improve NHTSA’s defects and recall mission. Pascale also oversaw all aspects of NHTSA’s interactions with Congress.
Pascale previously was a senior advisor to Senator Carl Levin from Michigan, worked in the House of Representatives and at the Government Accountability Office and was a Presidential Management Fellow. She holds undergraduate and graduate degrees from American University in International Studies and International Relations.
Rika is a senior leader, technologist, best-selling author, investor, and frequent public speaker on technology-powered business transformation. She is Group Vice President within NTT’s New Ventures & Innovation team where she is building the Agile Innovation practice for emerging technologies like Edge Computing, 5G, AR/VR and IoT. She is also the co-founder and board chair of the impact venture Strides AI which powers diversity in senior leadership and has been awarded CRN’s “Women of the Channel Power 70” recognition for her achievements in supporting diversity in the tech industry.
Dr. Sweta Chakraborty is a climate behavioral scientist who is regularly interviewed on major, international news media outlets like CNN, the BBC, MSNBC, etc. Sweta is the US CEO for We Don’t Have Time, the world’s largest social media and communications company for accelerating climate solutions. She is a partner at Pioneer Public Affairs and is on the steering committee of the Global Commons Alliance. She is an Independent Director at Lightbridge Corp. where she chairs their ESG committee, and is on several advisory boards like the New York Academy of Sciences and Climate Power. She is a book author from her time as a postdoc at Oxford University. She is a TEDx, SXSW, and globally recognized keynote speaker and consultant for several Fortune 100 companies.
James Maloney is Founder and Managing Partner of Tiger Hill Partners. He oversees the firm’s Public Affairs and Issue Advocacy solutions.
He has extensive experience working with C-Suite executives and Boards of Directors within the private investment and technology sectors. James provides hands-on counsel to clients across corporate affairs strategies, inclusive of policy and regulatory guidance, issue advocacy campaigns, stakeholder engagement, and corporate reputation.
He was previously a senior member of the Financial Communications & Capital Markets practice at the global public relations firm Edelman, where he helped lead teams focused on global alternative investment firms.
Earlier, James was the Head of Public Affairs and Communications for the American Investment Council, the leading private equity industry trade association. He directed the Council’s external affairs, media relations, and coalition management, and advised on government relations. James was part of the senior leadership team’s successful efforts during the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. He also served as the Council’s principal spokesperson, quoted in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The Financial Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, Politico, The Hill, and financial and political trade publications and newsletters.
James has also led policy and communications for numerous U.S. Congressional campaigns and worked in corporate strategy.
He currently serves on the Executive Board of Venture for America and Sustaining Board of YOUTH INC.
Ms. Serpliss has over 24 years managing project execution for strategic customers within Schneider Electric, 17 of which is in the federal data center space. Seven years developing account plans and project execution within the commercial space. Amy excels at working with federal organizations to turn mission requirements into conceptual design strategies that support the datacenter infrastructure space. She also implements this plan by teaming with the appropriate engineering, hardware, and MEP experts for flawless execution.
Ms. Serpliss has experience leading complex projects in both new construction and the modernization of existing spaces. Her knowledge enables her to meet customers growing demand for greater efficiency, resiliency, and increased compute densities. Amy’s installed sites span DOD locations both CONUS and OCONUS. Referenced experience includes compliance with military construction projects aspiring for LEED or global equivalent certifications, working within Combatant Commands, ICD 705 compliance in both new construction and the modernization of existing spaces, and the design through implementation process of prefabricated data centers world-wide.
Josh Sawislak is an internationally recognized advisor on climate and disaster resilience and sustainable development and is a managing director at Deloitte Consulting LLP. He advises governments, corporations, international organizations, and NGOs on sustainable and resilient strategies and programs in both the developed and developing world. He has served at the highest levels of government and industry in His expertise includes decarbonizing the built environment, implementation of sustainability and climate programs, and disaster risk reduction for communities and the private sector.
He holds concurrent appointments as a distinguished senior fellow of the Global Resilience Institute (GRI) at Northeastern University, a professional affiliate of the Center Urban and Environmental Solutions (CUES) at Florida Atlantic University, a member of the executive advisory board of the Megalopolitian Coastal Transformation Hub (MACH) at Rutgers University, and a Senior Advisor to the Honolulu-based Hawai’i Green Growth/Local 2030 Hub. He also serves as a review editor of the Fifth National Climate Assessment (NCA5).
Brent Skorup is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. His research areas include transportation technology, telecommunications, aviation, and wireless policy.
He serves on the FCC’s Broadband Deployment Advisory Committee, the Texas DOT’s Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Task Force, and the Texas DOT’s Urban Air Mobility Advisory Committee. He is also a member of the Federalist Society’s Regulatory Transparency Project.
The White House, the FCC, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and a dissenting opinion at the Illinois Supreme Court have cited his research. In addition to economics and law journal publication, he has authored pieces for National Affairs, Reuters, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Wired, Air Traffic Management magazine, Regulation magazine, and elsewhere. He’s appeared as a TV and radio interview guest for news outlets like C-SPAN, NPR, CBS News, ABC News, and CNBC Asia.
Brent has a BA in economics from Wheaton College and a law degree from the George Mason University School of Law, where he was articles editor for the Civil Rights Law Journal. He was a legal clerk at the FCC’s Wireless Telecommunications Bureau and at the Energy and Commerce Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives. Before joining Mercatus, he was the Director of Research at the Information Economy Project, a law and economics university research center.
David Lu is a co-founder and the CEO of Clarity Movement Co, anenvironmental tech startup focused on changing how we understand theenvironment by deploying dense networks for real-time air qualitymonitoring. Prior to starting Clarity, David was a key leader in theUniversity of California’s Fossil Fuel Divestment Campaign and workedalongside the Arctic Campaign Director at Greenpeace. Fueled by hiseverlasting passion for improving our environment, namely mitigatingclimate change, David believes in using data driven approaches toaddress the issues arising in global environmental crises. David earnedhis BS in Atmospheric Science from the University of California,Berkeley.
Accenture
Adobe
Albright Stonebridge Group
Alliance for Automotive Innovation
Apple
British Embassy
BSA | The Software Alliance
Capgemini
CCE
City of Miami
City of Philadelphia
City of San Diego
Center for American Progress
Cisco
Clarity Movement Co.
Clean Collateral
Climate Mayors
Communications Daily
Dassault Systèmes
District of Columbia
Deloitte
Department of State
Environmental Defense Fund
Einride
Embassy of Austria
Embassy of Canada
Embassy of France
Embassy of Hungary
Federal Communications Commission
FedScoop
Fluence Energy
FTI Consulting
Georgetown University
George Mason University
Harvard Business Review
HP
IFC – World Bank Group
Information Technology Industry Council
Intel
InterDigital
Kyndryl
Last Energy
Lux Research
Mitsui
NetApp
Nokia
Oklo Inc.
Qualcomm
Redwood Climate Communications
Reuters
Rewiring America
Samsung
Satellite Industry Association
Schneider Electric
ServiceNow
Sweden-US Green Transition Initiative
Tata Consulting Services
The Economist
The Hill
The Maureen and Mike Mansfield Foundation
Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership
Treasury Department
U.S. Department of Energy
U.S. Department of State
U.S. Department of Transportation
U.S. House of Representatives
U.S. Senate
University of Maryland
University of Pennsylvania
Utility API
Welsh Government
Wentworth Institute of Technology
Woodwell Climate Research Center
And many more…
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