
This Can't Be Happening
Sites of Interest
(courtesy Empire Burlesque)
Arthur Silber
Angry Arab
Antiwar.com
A Tiny Revolution
Gore Vidal
William Blum/Killing Hope
Baltimore Chronicle
Buzzflash
Magnificent Valor
The Distant Ocean
Glenn Greenwald
Horton/Harper's
Informed Comment
Vast Left
TomDispatch
Truthdig
Welcome to the Sideshow
Winter Patriot
Andy Worthington
Alicublog
Counterpunch
Mark Crispin Miller
Dennis Perrin
Booman Tribune
Crooks and Liars
ConsortiumNews
Eschaton
Black Agenda Report
LRB Blog
The Raw Story
Sadly, No!
James Wolcott
William Bowles
European Tribune
Iraq Vets Against the War
Blues and Dreams
Bright Terrible Spirit
Co-winner
of the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1997, US Secretary of Energy Steven
Chu is one of the most distinguished faces of renewable energy in the
world, tasked with helping the Obama Administration invest in clean
energy, reduce dependence on foreign oil, address climate change
concerns and create millions of jobs while doing it. Chu has devoted a
large part of his scientific career to alternative energy solutions and
climate change research, in part as former director of the DoE's
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab. While the last century saw him win the
Nobel Prize, this century earned him R&D Magazine's Scientist of the
Year award for 2011. In announcing his appointment as Secretary of
Energy, President Obama said that the "future of our economy and
national security is inextricably linked to one challenge: energy [and]
Steven has blazed new trails ...". Chu's most tangible successes have
been the government's investment in geothermal and offshore wind projects.
Indeed,
Chu is one of the world's leading authorities on renewable energy; and
on a geopolitical level, his influence reaches to China. Chu is a
foreign member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, has trained prominent
scientists in China and helped to establish the Bio-X Center at
Jiaotong University in Shanghai - all of this gives him valuable access
to Chinese politicians.
Dan Reicher - Energy Guru
Until November 2011, Dan Reicher served as Google's director of climate change and green energy initiatives,
during which time he convinced the company to invest in a number of
energy projects, some of them rather eccentric and risky, others more
pragmatic. He was also behind Google's policy proposals for Washington.
Prior to 2007, Reicher served in the Clinton Administration as the
assistant secretary of energy for energy efficiency and renewable
energy. He was also considered for the post of energy secretary in the
Obama Administration, but lost out to our first pick, Steven Chu.
Today, he's practicing his innovation at Stanford University,
which chose him to lead its new $7 million center to study and advance
the development and deployment of clean energy technologies through
innovative policy and finance. Stanford alumni Thomas Steyer and Kat
Thomas donated the $7 million and trust in Reicher to lead the
university's efforts, which they said "is uniquely positioned to change
our nation's attitudes and capabilities regarding how we make and use
energy. What our university did for the information revolution, it must
now do for the energy revolution." Broadly, the Stanford center will
conduct research on energy policy and finance, with a particular focus
on legislative, regulatory and business tools - all intended to boost
public support for funding clean energy technologies. It also hopes to
produce world-class research for policymakers, the business community,
and technology leaders. Reicher is influential in the renewable energy
world on a number of levels, from finance to policy to advocacy. Not
only does he have the ear of the government on policy, he also has the
$7 million Stanford research effort at his disposal.
Elon Musk - Iron Man
Elon
Musk is probably the most colorful of the figures on our Top 5 list. He
has Hollywood's eyes and ears, as well, which only adds to his public
influence. Musk is the co-founder of and head of product design at Tesla
Motors, the producer of electric cars, which is almost a singular focus
of Musk's current green energy efforts. Musk entrepreneurial innovation
had already been demonstrated pre-Tesla, when he co-founded PayPal and
SpaceX. He also chairs the board of SolarCity, a start-up focused on photovoltaics products
and services aimed at climate change solutions. Most recently, Musk
created the first viable electric car of the modern era, the high-end
Tesla Roadster sports.
The
Tesla Roadster will be followed by the four-door Model S sedan,
scheduled to release in July, and the ModelX (a sort of SUV/minivan
hybrid), slated for production in 2013. Musk's vision: making electric
cars affordable to mass-market consumers thereby making a huge footprint
in American and global energy efficiency and security. The Roadster is a
high-end vehicle that will only attract the wealthy, but that is the
point: Roadster revenues can fund research and development for
lower-priced electric cars.
Countless
awards and honors have come Musk's way, from the Heinlein Price for
Advances in Space Commercialization in 2011 to inclusion on Forbes' list
of "America's 20 Most Powerful CEOs 40 and Under" that same year.
Incidentally, Mush designed the first privately developed rocket to
reach orbit and served as the inspiration for the genius billionaire
Tony Stark in the Iron Man movie series. He also made it onto TIME
Magazine's (often dubious) list of 100 most influential people in 2010.
Eddie O'Connor - Supergrid Superhero
Eddie
O'Connor, the CEO and co-founder of Mainstream Renewable Energy and the
original founder of Airtrcity, is one of the world's most interesting,
energetic and innovative clean energy figures. O'Connor sold Airtricity
to E.on and Scottish and Southern Energy for €2.2 billion in 2008,
when he launched Mainstream along with Airtricity's former finance
chief, Fintan Whelan, investing €32 million in the start-up. O'Conner,
who got his start in Ireland's electricity company, has earned energy
leadership awards across Europe, and in 2003 was named World Energy
Policy Leader by Scientific American Magazine. O'Connor is behind the
creation of some amazing onshore and offshore wind farm projects in
Europe, North America, South America and South Africa, and is perhaps
best known for his promotion of the European Offshore Supergrid, which
envisions electricity interconnectivity on a scale that would entirely
transform the European energy scene. O'Connor's work has been extremely
influential on global policy and he has certainly earned his place among
the world's most innovative public figures. He combines ideas with
advocacy and action.