2020 Featured Speakers

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2020 Featured Speakers 2020 Featured Speakers Partial List – see main agenda for a comprehensive list of speakers Government Officials Marissa Aho Lara Cottingham H.E. Rocío Nahle García Chief Resilience Officer, City of Houston Chief Sustainability Officer, City of Houston, Secretary of Energy, Ministry of Energy Mexico Abdirashid Mohamed Ahmed Office of Sustainability Naheed Nenshi Barney Crockett Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Lord Provost of Aberdeen City, Aberdeen City Mayor, The City of Calgary Ministry of Petroleum & Mineral Resources, Council Nurlan Askarovich Nogaev Somalia S.C.L. Das Minister of Energy, Ministry of Energy, Republic Mohamed Al Hammadi Director General, Directorate General of of Kazakhstan CEO, Emirates Nuclear Energy Corporation Hydrocarbons (DGH) Seamus O’Regan Mr. Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi H.E. Eng. Tarek El Molla Minister of Natural Resources, Canada Minister of State for Energy Affairs, Qatar Minister of Petroleum, Egypt Roman Opimakh Ibrahim Al-Muhanna Hon. Paul M. Dabbar Director General, State Geologic and Subsoil Consultant & Advisor to Saudi Oil Ministry, Under Secretary for Science, US DOE Survey of Ukraine Ministry of Energy, Industry and Mineral Francis Fannon Jaime Pumarejo Resources Saudi Arabia Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of Energy Mayor of Barranquilla, City of Barranquilla Ayed S. Al-Qahtani Resources (ENR), US DOS Jeff Radebe Director of Research Division, OPEC Jesper Frost Rasmussen Special Envoy for Energy, South Africa Fahad Al-Jubair Mayor, Esbjerg Kommune Joy Romero Mayor, Eastern Province Municipality Thomas R. Hardy VP Technology and Innovation, Canadian Hon. John Peter Amewu Director (Acting), U.S. Trade and Development Natural Resources Minister of Energy, Ghana Agency (USTDA) Mayor Mike Savage Alparslan Bayraktar Hirohide Hirai Mayor, Halifax Regional Municipality Deputy Minister of Energy and Natural Director-General, Ministry of Economy, Trade Melissa Simpson Resources, Ministry of Energy and Natural and Industry (METI) Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Energy Resources of Turkey (MENR) William Hohenstein Resources (ENR), U.S. Department of State Minister Bento Albuquerque Director of the Office of Energy and Kadri Simson Minister of Mines & Energy, Brazil Environmental Policy, U.S. Department of Commissioner, European H.E. Mohammad Sanusi Barkindo Agriculture (USDA) Commission for Energy Secretary General, OPEC Brian Hook María Fernanda Suárez Londoño Alparslan Bayraktar Special Representative for Iran and Senior Minister of Mines and Energy, Ministry of Mines Deputy Minister of Energy and Natural Policy Advisor to the Secretary of State, United and Energy Colombia Resources, Ministry of Energy and Natural States Department of State Chief Timipre Marlin Sylva Resources of Turkey (MENR) Andrew Kamau Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, Renata Beckert Isfer Principal Secretary, State Department of Federal Republic of Nigeria Deputy Secretary of Oil, Natural Gas and Petroleum, Ministry of Petroleum and Mining, Joel Szabat Biofuels, MME, Brazil Kenya Deputy Assistant Secretary for Transportation Dr. Fatih Birol Jason Kenney, M.L.A. Policy, US Department of Transportation Executive Director, IEA Premier, Alberta Angus Taylor MP Adam Boehler Rajiv Kumar Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, Chief Executive Officer, U.S. International Australia Development Finance Corporation (DFC) Vice Chairman, NITI Aayog Mayor Sylvester Turner Danny Breen Lt. Gen. Steven L. Kwast Mayor, City of St. John’s Commander, U.S. Air Force Mayor of City of Houston, City of Houston Hon. Dan Brouillette Hon. Joe Manchin Carlos Alfredo Vecchio DeMari Secretary of Energy, United States Department United States Senator for West Virginia, United Ambassador, Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela of Energy States Senate Committee on Energy & Natural to the United States Dr. Mark Bynoe Resources H.E. Dr. Mohamed Abdel Vetah Department of Energy Director, Guyana Luis Alberto Moreno Minister of Petroleum, Energy, & Mines Hon. Neil Chatterjee President, Inter-American Development Bank Bruce J. Walker Chairman, US FERC (IDB) Assistant Secretary, Office of Electricity, U.S. Abdourahmane Cissé Hon. Lisa Murkowski Department of Energy Minister of Petroleum, Energy and Renewable Chairman, US Senate Andrew R. Wheeler Energy, Cote d’Ivoire Diego Mesa Administrator, US EPA Fortune Chasi Vice Minister of Energy, Colombia Steven Winberg Minister of Energy and Power Development, Luis Miguel Morelli Assistant Secretary Fossil Energy, United States Ministry of Energy & Power Department of Energy Development, Zimbabwe President, National Hydrocarbon Agency 2020 Featured Speakers Partial List – see main agenda for a comprehensive list of speakers Oil and Gas Umar Ajiya Maryam Brown Øyvind Eriksen Chief Financial Officer, Nigerian National President, Southern California Gas Company President & CEO, Aker ASA Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Jaime Caballero Uribe Jonathan Evans Tayba Al Hashemi Chief Financial Officer, Ecopetrol S.A. President & Chief Executive Officer, Lithium Chief Executive Officer, Al Yasat Petroleum, Luis Cabra Dueñas Americas Corp. ADNOC Executive Managing Director of Technology Oritsemeyiwa Eyesan Abdul Nasser Al Mughairbi Development, Resources, and Sustainability, Group General Manager, Corporate Planning Digital Unit Manager, Abu Dhabi National Oil Repsol & Strategy (CP&S), Nigerian National Company (ADNOC) Roberto Casula Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) Shaikh Nawaf S. Al-Sabah Chairman, Eni Next, Eni David Eyton CEO, KFPEC Hee-Bong Chae Group Head of Research and Technology, BP Vagit Alekperov President and CEO, Korea Gas Corporation James R. Fitterling President of PJSC, Lukoil Jimmy Chen CEO, The Dow Chemical Company Ahmed Ali Attiga Program Manager, SECA - Stanford Energy Yasushi Fukuizumi Chief Executive Officer, Arab Petroleum Corporate Affiliates, Stanford University Executive Officer & Senior Executive Fellow, Investments Corporation (APICORP) Rod Christie Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) Marco Alverà President & Chief Executive Officer, Ganesh Kailasam Chief Executive Officer, Snam Turbomachinery Solutions, Baker Hughes, a Vice President Technology, OGCI Climate B. Anand GE company (BHGE) Investments Chief Executive Officer, Nayara Energy Al Cook Maria Rita Galli Etienne Anglès d'Auriac Executive Vice President GSB, Equinor Executive Vice President Business Vice-President Climate Strategy, TOTAL Luca Cosentino Development, Snam S.p.A Alan S. Armstrong Executive Vice President, Energy Solutions, Tomás García President & Chief Executive Officer, The Eni Executive Managing Director of Exploration & Williams Companies Paulo Côrte-Real Neves Production, Repsol Neil Atkinson MD Raizen Trading, Raízen Gabrielle Gauthey Head of Oil Industry and Markets Division, João Paulo Costeira Directeur Carbon Neutrality Businesses, International Energy Agency Chief Development Officer, Repsol TOTAL Jun Bai Electricidad y Gas Hinda Gharbi VP, Research Institute, Beijing Gas Group Anthony Cottone EVP Reservoir & Infrastructure, Schlumberger Gustavo Baquero Senior Director, Oxy Low Carbon Ventures Dario Giordano Senior Vice President, Operations Nicholas Cron Licensing Green Chemistry Manager, Versalis Technology Excellence, Development & Vice President Portfolio Optimization and Paul Goodfellow Production International, Equinor Marketing, Xcoal Energy & Resources Executive Vice President, Deep Water Chris Barton Mike Culligan & Chairman, Shell Midstream Partners, Shell President, OneStim, Schlumberger Ltd. Manager, LNG Technology & Licensing, Hendrick Gordenker Felipe Bayón Pardo ConocoPhillips Executive Chairman, JERA Co. Inc. Chief Executive Officer, Ecopetrol S.A. Helen Currie Steve Green Ashok Belani Chief Economist, ConocoPhillips President, Chevron North America E&P Executive Vice President of Technology, Bashir Dabbousi Linhua Guan Schlumberger Ltd. Director, Technology Strategy & Planning, Chief Executive Officer, Surge Energy Leila Benali Saudi Aramco Lori Guetre Chief Economist, Head of Strategy, Energy Prof. Dr. Nasir Darman VP, US Business Development, Carbon Economics & Sustainability, Arab Petroleum Chief Technology Officer, PETRONAS Engineering Ltd. Investments Corporation (APICORP) Claudio Descalzi Mauricio Gutierrez Kelly Bennett Chairman & Chief Executive Officer, Eni President and CEO, NRG Energy, Inc Co-Founder & CEO, B3 Insight Hugo Dijkgraaf Toufik Hakkar Luca Bertelli Chief Technology Officer, Wintershall Dea Chief Executive Officer, Sonatrach Chief Exploration Officer, Eni Stacey H. Dore Martha Hall Findlay Richard Boocock President, Hunt Utility Services Senior Vice-President & Chief Sustainability Senior Vice President, Chief Information Bob Dudley Officer, Suncor Energy Officer & Special Advisor to the Chairman, Air Chairman OGCI & Former Group Chief Rhea Hamilton Products & Chemicals Inc. Executive Officer, BP Ventures Director, OGCI Climate Investments Ahmed Hashmi Kim Boone Sherry Duhe Chief Digital and Technology Officer, General Manager, Technical Computing, Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Chevron Upstream, BP plc. Officer, Woodside Energy Ltd. Craig Hayman Arnaud Breuillac Roland Ewubare President, Exploration & Production, TOTAL Chief Executive Officer, AVEVA Chief Operating Officer, Upstream, Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) 2020 Featured Speakers Partial List – see main agenda for a comprehensive list of speakers Oil and Gas Hans Jakob Hegge Sanjeev Kumar Mario Mehren President and Country Manager at Equinor Managing Director, Gujrat State Petroleum
Recommended publications
  • Corpus Christi College the Pelican Record
    CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE THE PELICAN RECORD Vol. LI December 2015 CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE THE PELICAN RECORD Vol. LI December 2015 i The Pelican Record Editor: Mark Whittow Design and Printing: Lynx DPM Limited Published by Corpus Christi College, Oxford 2015 Website: http://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk Email: [email protected] The editor would like to thank Rachel Pearson, Julian Reid, Sara Watson and David Wilson. Front cover: The Library, by former artist-in-residence Ceri Allen. By kind permission of Nick Thorn Back cover: Stone pelican in Durham Castle, carved during Richard Fox’s tenure as Bishop of Durham. Photograph by Peter Rhodes ii The Pelican Record CONTENTS President’s Report ................................................................................... 3 President’s Seminar: Casting the Audience Peter Nichols ............................................................................................ 11 Bishop Foxe’s Humanistic Library and the Alchemical Pelican Alexandra Marraccini ................................................................................ 17 Remembrance Day Sermon A sermon delivered by the President on 9 November 2014 ....................... 22 Corpuscle Casualties from the Second World War Harriet Fisher ............................................................................................. 27 A Postgraduate at Corpus Michael Baker ............................................................................................. 34 Law at Corpus Lucia Zedner and Liz Fisher ....................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Reporter272web.Pdf
    Issue 272 ▸ 15 may 2014 reporterSharing stories of Imperial’s community Imperial 2.0 Rebooting the College’s web presence to reach a growing global audience of mobile users → centre pages FESTIVAL FOR ALL SAVVY SCIENCE SAFETY SAGE Third Imperial Dr Ling Ge Ian Gillett, Festival proves on boosting Safety Director, huge hit with enterprise retires record numbers and public PAGE 10 PAGE 12 engagement PAGE 11 2 >> newsupdate www.imperial.ac.uk/reporter | reporter | 15 May 2014 • issue 272 Renewed drive for engineering through inspirational role models; and improve and increase Imperial’s recognition for equality in UK science promoting gender equality through Athena SWAN Charter awards. Imperial has joined a campaign led by the Chancellor Professor Debra Humphris, Vice Provost (Education) EDITOR’S CORNER to boost participation in technology and engineering at Imperial, said: “We want to help shatter myths and careers among women. change perceptions about women in STEM. It’s fantastic to get the Chancellor’s backing for these goals. Digital The ‘Your Life’ initiative brings together government, business, professional bodies and leading educational wonder institutions who are all working to improve We want to help shatter myths opportunities for women in science, technology, and change perceptions.” Do you remember those engineering and maths (STEM). The scheme was tentative steps when launched by Chancellor George Osborne at the Science you first dipped your Museum on 7 May. “Meeting this challenge will not be easy. It will toes into the World Wide As part of the campaign Imperial has pledged to: require a concerted effort throughout the College.
    [Show full text]
  • Saving the Information Commons a New Public Intere S T Agenda in Digital Media
    Saving the Information Commons A New Public Intere s t Agenda in Digital Media By David Bollier and Tim Watts NEW AMERICA FOUNDA T I O N PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE Saving the Information Commons A Public Intere s t Agenda in Digital Media By David Bollier and Tim Watts Washington, DC Ack n owl e d g m e n t s This report required the support and collaboration of many people. It is our pleasure to acknowledge their generous advice, encouragement, financial support and friendship. Recognizing the value of the “information commons” as a new paradigm in public policy, the Ford Foundation generously supported New America Foundation’s Public Assets Program, which was the incubator for this report. We are grateful to Gigi Sohn for helping us develop this new line of analysis and advocacy. We also wish to thank The Open Society Institute for its important support of this work at the New America Foundation, and the Center for the Public Domain for its valuable role in helping Public Knowledge in this area. Within the New America Foundation, Michael Calabrese was an attentive, helpful colleague, pointing us to useful literature and knowledgeable experts. A special thanks to him for improv- ing the rigor of this report. We are also grateful to Steve Clemons and Ted Halstead of the New America Foundation for their role in launching the Information Commons Project. Our research and writing of this report owes a great deal to a network of friends and allies in diverse realms. For their expert advice, we would like to thank Yochai Benkler, Jeff Chester, Rob Courtney, Henry Geller, Lawrence Grossman, Reed Hundt, Benn Kobb, David Lange, Jessica Litman, Eben Moglen, John Morris, Laurie Racine and Carrie Russell.
    [Show full text]
  • Oil & Gas Risk Service
    IHS ENERGY Oil & Gas Risk Service Why IHS Energy Oil and Gas Providing a global view of Risk Service? comparative investment risks in • An oil & gas industry - focused approach to risk assessment across the upstream oil and gas sector 130 producing and frontier territories. Analysis and monitoring of above-ground • Created and produced by petroleum factors that affect the profitability of E&P capital sector experts. investments and continuing operations. • Designed specifically for use in oil & gas industry workflows The Oil and Gas Risk Service (OGRS) provides executives in corporate strategy - from new business and risk management, business development and new ventures, and corporate to strategy to portfolio security with forward-looking analysis on above-ground petroleum sector risks in and risk evaluation. hydrocarbon producing and frontier countries. OGRS analysis is built around our proprietary risk methodology, which evaluates 130 countries and territories against 21 factors to offer clients an objective and systematic way to compare risk between Clients Receive: countries and at different stages of the investment cycle. • Timely, essential OGRS clients receive timely briefs and research notes on current events and expert analysis, developments influencing the above-ground upstream risk environment, incorporating IHS as well as in-depth special reports and quarterly presentations. These features Energy data, work together to create a comprehensive view enabling clients to understand, forecasts and mapping tools. manage and mitigate risk in new country entry, project assessment, portfolio evaluation, and strategic planning. • Insight into the dynamics shaping policy choices in producing countries and emerging exploration frontiers. • Identification of future points of risk and the impact on upstream investment.
    [Show full text]
  • Itraxx Europe & Crossover Series 35 Final Membership List
    iTraxx Europe & Crossover Series 35 Final Membership List March 2021 Copyright © 2021 IHS Markit Ltd T180614 iTraxx Europe & Crossover Series 35 Final Membership List 1 iTraxx Europe Series 35 Final Membership List......................................... 3 2 iTraxx Europe Series 35 Final vs. Series 34.............................................. 7 3 iTraxx Crossover Series 35 Final Membership List ................................... 8 4 iTraxx Crossover Series 35 Final vs. Series 34........................................11 5 Further information ...................................................................................12 Copyright © 2021 IHS Markit Ltd | 2 T180614 iTraxx Europe & Crossover Series 35 Final Membership List 1 iTraxx Europe Series 35 Final Membership List iTraxx Sector IHS Markit Ticker IHS Markit Long Name Autos & Industrials AIRBSE AIRBUS SE Autos & Industrials VLVY AKTIEBOLAGET VOLVO Autos & Industrials AKZO AKZO NOBEL N.V. Autos & Industrials ALSTOM ALSTOM Autos & Industrials AAUK ANGLO AMERICAN PLC Autos & Industrials AZN ASTRAZENECA PLC Autos & Industrials BAPLC BAE SYSTEMS PLC Autos & Industrials BASFSE BASF SE Autos & Industrials BYIF BAYER AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT Autos & Industrials BMW BAYERISCHE MOTOREN WERKE AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT Autos & Industrials BOUY BOUYGUES Autos & Industrials CNHIND CNH INDUSTRIAL N.V. Autos & Industrials STGOBN COMPAGNIE DE SAINT-GOBAIN Autos & Industrials COMPFIAG COMPAGNIE FINANCIERE MICHELIN SA Autos & Industrials CONTI CONTINENTAL AKTIENGESELLSCHAFT Autos & Industrials DAMLR DAIMLER
    [Show full text]
  • Advancing the Landscape of Clean Energy Innovation
    Advancing the Landscape of Clean Energy Innovation February,February 20192018 Prepared for Breakthrough Energy Coalitionby by IHS Markit and Energy Futures Initiative Advancing the Landscape of Clean Energy Innovation, February 2019 1 Foreword We are pleased to submit our report, “Advancing the Landscape of Clean Energy Innovation.” In this report we describe today’s U.S. ecosystem of clean energy innovation from the perspectives of technological potential, investment patterns, institutional roles, and public policy. The report identifies critical strengths and weaknesses of this ecosystem and offers recommendations for making that ecosystem more effective. It examines the different technology readiness stages through which innovation passes and the importance of feedback among those stages. It also discusses the significant opportunities to accelerate the pace of clean energy innovation that are presented by rapid advances occurring today across a myriad of technologies originating outside the energy sector. We would like to emphasize three observations from our report. • First, the U.S. has shown over many decades an unparalleled capacity to nurture energy innovation. This capacity reflects a rich and durable collaboration among government, universities, research institutions, industry, and entrepreneurs. This collaboration is grounded in the belief that energy innovation contributes importantly to economic growth, energy security, and environmental stewardship. • Second, even with our capacity to innovate, and even with the emergence of innumerable technological opportunities, there are significant challenges in moving forward with clean energy technology. These challenges arise from the sheer size and complexity of existing systems, the degree to which these systems are embedded in our economy, and the high public expectations of safety and reliability they must meet.
    [Show full text]
  • International Upstream Database
    International Upstream Database I IHS Markit’s International E&P and Basins information is the most comprehensive and reliable dataset available to oil and gas industry professionals today. Commercial and subsurface workflows are greatly enhanced by our content and expertise which can be accessed through dedicated IHS Markit tools or by direct connection to many industry-standard analytical and spatial platforms. With technical teams positioned around the globe, up to date E&P data is researched daily by our regional, highly experienced experts with proficiencies in more than 30 languages and covering more than 215 countries. Our teams maintain an unparalleled communication network with operators, national oil companies, government agencies and service companies worldwide enabling the tracking, reporting and analysis of industry activity providing critical detail for decision makers. Our content enables our users to assess opportunities at any scale. Providing detailed insights across the exploration and production arena, from regional prospectivity to company portfolio benchmarking. Opportunity Screening ‒ Analyse country and basin entry opportunities such as available farm-ins and license rounds, gain critical insights into peer group activities and exploration trends including recent discoveries and key high impact wells. Basin and Play Analysis ‒ Use the wealth of geologic detail contained within IHS Markit’s exploration and production database to assist with regional to play scale basin analyses and understand petroleum systems and play fairways. ‒ Use our extensive well coverage to high-grade the most prospective basin areas. Understand the risks and opportunities of established and prospective plays including reservoir-level volumetrics. ‒ Undertake systematic basin & reservoir analogue research with our extensive reservoirs database at your disposal.
    [Show full text]
  • The Paris Accord and Climate Change the President Has
    The Paris Accord and Climate Change The President has announced that he will withdraw the United States from the Paris Accord, which entered into force November 4, 2016. According to Article 28 of the Accord, the U.S. must wait three years from the November 4, 2016 date to make written notification that it will withdraw from the Accord. The United States then must wait at least an additional year from the date of this written notification to leave the Accord. Hence, given these conditions written into the Accord, U.S. voters awaiting the 2020 presidential election will have the opportunity to decide as a major political issue what actions the United States should take about the Paris Accord and climate change. The President’s announcement of his intention to withdraw from the Paris Accord generated substantial criticism from G-20 national leaders during their last meeting July 7-8 2017 in Hamburg, Germany. Those leaders, other than the US President, have indicated unanimous support for implementing the Paris Accord. The leaders of the European Union and China state they will move ahead with plans to implement the Accord, whether or not the United States remains a signatory. The Paris Accord states as one of its objectives “holding the increase in the global temperature to well below 2 degrees C above the pre-industrial levels and to pursue efforts to limit the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees C above pre- industrial levels”. This wording was negotiated in recognition that the Earth (and its present and future populations) will undergo profound and insupportable warming, further acidification of the oceans, and significant sea level rise threatening the world’s coastal communities unless the world’s greenhouse gas emissions are brought under control.
    [Show full text]
  • Corpus Christi College the Pelican Record
    CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE THE PELICAN RECORD Vol. LII December 2016 i The Pelican Record Editor: Mark Whittow Design and Printing: Lynx DPM Published by Corpus Christi College, Oxford 2016 Website: http://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk Email: [email protected] The editor would like to thank Rachel Pearson, Julian Reid, Joanna Snelling, Sara Watson and David Wilson. Front cover: Detail of the restored woodwork in the College Chapel. Back cover: The Chapel after the restoration work. Both photographs: Nicholas Read ii The Pelican Record CONTENTS President’s Report .................................................................................... 3 Carol Service 2015 Judith Maltby.................................................................................................... 12 Claymond’s Dole Mark Whittow .................................................................................................. 16 The Hallifax Bowl Richard Foster .................................................................................................. 20 Poisoning, Cannibalism and Victorian England in the Arctic: The Discovery of HMS Erebus Cheryl Randall ................................................................................................. 25 An MCR/SCR Seminar: “An Uneasy Partnership?: Science and Law” Liz Fisher .......................................................................................................... 32 Rubbage in the Garden David Leake .....................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Digitalization of Exploration and Resource Development
    Digitalization of Exploration and Resource Development Questions driving the future direction of the digitalization of E&RD Data ML algorithms Where does the data Who owns the IP—algorithm “...The oil and (and its associated IP) developers or data owners; gas companies What data is shared? reside when it’s in the cloud? whose data improves the decided last week What data is kept proprietary? algorithms? not to fund the drilling of the stratigraphic wells ... Instead, the group has decided Can the industry generate all to collaborate on What will an organization’s core insights needed for greater success What are the new data management subsurface competencies be? from the data it already has? business models strategies and use Developing the algorithms or (e.g., XaaS) that advances in big adapting them? will be enabled by data operations digitalization of E&RD? to find new ways of identifying exploration targets.” Upstreamonline, 2018 Industry progression toward digitalization of E&RD “Aim is to integrate everything together. It’s such a big job, start by doing something small first” Subsurface Digital Team, Major E&P firm, 2018 Improve efficiency • Automate repetitive tasks • Accelerate the pace required to arrive 15-25% Transformed workflows Traditional workflows at a decision efficiency • High level of domain gain? • Streamlined activities expertise • Automated toward • Time consuming, autonomous tedious, repetitive tasks • Integrated across functions Characterize and reduce uncertainty and lifecycle • Incomplete information • Incorporate
    [Show full text]
  • Princeton University
    Department of Energy Office of Science Washington, DC 20585 July 1, 2020 Dr. Steven Cowley Director Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory 100 Stellerator Road Princeton, New Jersey 08540 Dear Dr. Cowley: It is a pleasure to inform you that the Princeton University (PU) at the Department of Energy (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL) has successfully completed the DOE Earned Value Management System (EVMS) Acceptance Review process. As a result of the independent surveillance review conducted and the corrective actions taken by PU-PPPL, it has been determined that the EVMS is compliant and meets the guidelines of the Electrical Industries Alliance (EIA)-748. To verify EVMS compliance, an independent surveillance/EVMS acceptance review was conducted at PPPL on December 4-5, 2019, to determine if the PU-PPPL EVMS met the EIA requirements. During the review, the surveillance committee identified five Corrective Action Requests (CARs); five Continuous Improvement Opportunities* (CIO*), requiring formal corrective action; and five Continuous Improvement Opportunities. Corrective Action Request (CARs) CAR-01 Organizational Breakdown Structure not being organized by function; CAR-02 Percent Complete Earned Value method not being used correctly; CAR-03 Monthly Estimate to Complete process to be reviewed and revised to report credible Estimate at Completion information; CAR-04 Incomplete Baseline Change Proposal documentation, and CAR-05 Revisions being made without authorization. Continuous Improvement Opportunities* (CIOs*) CIO-01* Work Authorization—process decision needed; CIO-02* Work started before work authorized; CIO-03* Cost Estimating procedure not being followed; CIO-04* Ensure schedule quality after monthly updates; and CIO-05* Variance Analysis Process and timeliness needs to improve.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Change U.S. Climate Policy After There Is a Price on Carbon
    POLICY PROPOSAL 2019-15 | OCTOBER 2019 How to Change U.S. Climate Policy after There Is a Price on Carbon Roberton C. Williams III The Hamilton Project • Brookings i MISSION STATEMENT The Hamilton Project seeks to advance America’s promise of opportunity, prosperity, and growth. We believe that today’s increasingly competitive global economy demands public policy ideas commensurate with the challenges of the 21st Century. The Project’s economic strategy reflects a judgment that long-term prosperity is best achieved by fostering economic growth and broad participation in that growth, by enhancing individual economic security, and by embracing a role for effective government in making needed public investments. Our strategy calls for combining public investment, a secure social safety net, and fiscal discipline. In that framework, the Project puts forward innovative proposals from leading economic thinkers — based on credible evidence and experience, not ideology or doctrine — to introduce new and effective policy options into the national debate. The Project is named after Alexander Hamilton, the nation’s first Treasury Secretary, who laid the foundation for the modern American economy. Hamilton stood for sound fiscal policy, believed that broad-based opportunity for advancement would drive American economic growth, and recognized that “prudent aids and encouragements on the part of government” are necessary to enhance and guide market forces. The guiding principles of the Project remain consistent with these views. ii How to Change U.S. Climate Policy after There Is a Price on Carbon How to Change U.S. Climate Policy after There Is a Price on Carbon Roberton C.
    [Show full text]