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Renewable Energy and Clean Technology Series
Advisory Board
Bob Epstein, Founder, Environmental Entrepreneurs
Bob Epstein is an entrepreneur and engineer with a Ph.D.
from the University of California at Berkeley. He is a
co-founder of four information technology companies: Sybase,
Inc., GetActive Software, Zight (Colorado Microdisplay) and
Britton-Lee. Bob currently splits his professional time
between his roles as private investor, Director of GetActive
Software, Trustee of the Natural Resources Defense Council
and founder of Environmental Entrepreneurs. Bob's community
activities are focused on the environment, public education
and opera.
Joel Makower, Co-founder and Principal, CleanEdge
Mr. Makower, co-founder and principal of CleanEdge, is a
well-respected business writer and analyst, and a leading
voice on business, technology, and the environment. Prior to
founding Clean Edge, he was editor of The Green Business
Letter, a monthly newsletter on corporate environmental
strategy, and the creative force behind GreenBiz.com, an
acclaimed web portal on business and the environment.
Previously, Joel founded Tilden Press Inc., an award-winning
company that researches, writes, and produces books,
newsletters, and other editorial products and services. He is
a former nationally syndicated columnist, a bestselling
author or co-author of more than a dozen books, including The
E-Factor: The Bottom-Line Approach to Environmentally
Responsible Business, and is a frequent lecturer to
companies, associations, and business schools on clean
technology and sustainable business strategy.
Makower is a regular commentator on environmental topics
for "Marketplace," a nightly national business
program on public radio, and appears regularly in both
broadcast and print media. He lectures frequently to
companies, industry groups, and business schools throughout
North America, as well as in Europe, Asia, and South America.
He is a graduate in journalism of the University of
California at Berkeley.
Joel Serface, Venture Manager, Eastman Ventures
Before joining Eastman Ventures, Joel was a Director at
Sierra Ventures where he sourced software and energy
technology investments. Prior to Sierra Ventures, Joel helped
build the software practice at Alliant Partners, a technology
mergers and acquisitions boutique investment bank sold to
Silicon Valley Bank (NASDAQ: SIVB). Outside of Eastman, Joel
is on the Board of Venture Advisors for the California
Nanosystems Institute. Joel is also a founding member of
Environmental Entrepreneurs, a community of professionals who
believe that protecting the environment builds economic
prosperity. Joel also advises several energy and
environmental venture groups and university entrepreneurship
centers including the University of Texas College of
Engineering Center for Technology Entrepreneurship as its
first Entrepreneur in Residence.
Joel holds his M.B.A. from the MIT Sloan School of
Management where received the Patrick McGovern Award for
Entrepreneurial Leadership for starting the first MIT Sloan
Venture Capital Conference. Joel received his B.S. in
Chemical Engineering with concentrations in Environmental and
Biotech Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin.
Sunil Paul, Founder & CEO, Brightmail Inc. Angel
Investor
Sunil Paul was inspired to develop a better solution to
the spam problem because his personal email accounts were
overrun by spam. In October 1997, he founded Brightmail,
Inc., a company dedicated to giving users control of their
email. Prior to starting Brightmail, Sunil created FreeLoader,
Inc., the first company to offer a web-based push service. In
1996, Individual, Inc. acquired Freeloader for $38 million,
making it the best and second-best performing investments in
the VC portfolios of Euclid and Softbank, respectively.
Before launching FreeLoader, Sunil was with America Online
(AOL) as that company's first Internet Product Manager,
successfully creating most of AOL's Internet capabilities.
Before AOL, Sunil was a policy analyst at the U.S. Congress'
Office of Technology Assessment, where he specialized in
information technology and telecommunications, including the
then-emerging Internet. Prior to that, Sunil spent three
years working on NASA's Space Station Information System.
Sunil has a B.E. in electrical engineering from Vanderbilt
University.
Martin Rocheisen, CEO NanoSolar
Martin Roscheisen is a technology entrepreneur with a
passion for building market leaders in the most defining
industries and a track record of creating three
best-in-category companies (each ultimately acquired by their
respective industry leader--for $30 million, $432 million,
and $720 million) before identifying Nanosolar as the
ultimate opportunity. Martin Roscheisen received advanced
engineering degrees from Stanford University and Munich
Technical University, and holds a doctorate from Stanford
University's School of Engineering. An Austrian citizen born
in Munich, Martin Roscheisen got his Silicon Valley
apprenticeship as a teenager during a year at Xerox PARC. In
2003, Fortune named Martin Roscheisen one of the United
States' top 10 entrepreneurs under 40.
Daniel Kammen, Director, Renewable and Appropriate
Energy Lab
Daniel M. Kammen is Professor of Energy and Society in the
Energy and Resources Group (ERG) , Professor of Public Policy
in the Goldman School of Public Policy and is Professor of
Nuclear Engineering in the Department of Nuclear Engineering
at the University of California, Berkeley . He is also the
founding Director of the Renewable and Appropriate Energy
Laboratory (RAEL).
Dr. Kammen's research interests include: the science,
engineering, management, and dissemination of renewable
energy systems; health and environmental impacts of energy
generation and use; rural resource management, including
issues of gender and ethnicity; international R&D policy,
climate change; and energy forecasting and risk analysis. He
is the author of over 90 journal publications, a book on
environmental, technological, and health risks (Should We
Risk It?, Princeton University Press) and numerous reports on
renewable energy and development. He has been featured on
radio, network and public broadcasting television and in
print as an analyst of energy, environmental, and risk policy
issues and current events. His recent work on energy R&D
policy appeared in Science, and Environment, and has been
featured on PBS, KQED, CNN, and in many newspapers via the
Reuters news service.
Kammen advises the U. S. and Swedish Agencies for
International Development, the World Bank, and the Presidents
Committee on Science and Technology (PCAST), and is a member
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (Working
Group III and the Special Report on Technology Transfer). Dr.
Kammen serves on the technical review board for the GEF (the
STAP), is a lead author for the Special Report on Technology
Transfer of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
and advises the World Bank and the American Academy of Arts
and Sciences as well as the African Academy of Sciences
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