Job Title: 
CEO
Organization: 
NorthWestern Energy
  • Current position since August 2008
  • Board member since August 2008 
  • 20-plus years energy and utility industry experience
  • Co-Chair of the Institute for Electric Innovation, an Institute of the Edison Foundation focused on advancing the adoption of innovative and efficient technologies among electric utilities and their technology partners that will transform the power grid; a member of the EEI Board of Directors and Executive Committee; a member of the American Gas Association Board of Directors and Executive Committee; Western Energy Institute past chair and current executive committee member
  • Former chairman and commissioner of the Montana Public Service Commission from 1993-2004, and also served as president of the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC)
Profile Type: 
Speaker
Job Title: 
President and CEO
Organization: 
NERC

James (Jim) B. Robb assumed the role of NERC’s president and CEO in April 2018. Robb oversees NERC’s mission of assuring the reliability and security of the North American bulk power system. As president and CEO, Robb leads the Electric Reliability Organization (ERO) responsible for key programs, including those programs focused on development of mandatory NERC Reliability Standards, the Compliance Monitoring and Enforcement Program, situational awareness, event and risk analysis, reliability assessments and forecasting, and cyber and physical security, affecting approximately 1,400 bulk power system users, owners, and operators. He is also responsible for the performance of the Electricity Information Sharing and Analysis Center (E-ISAC) and key government partnerships.

As CEO, he is the chair of the ERO Enterprise Executive Committee, which oversees the operations of the six Regional Entities that support the reliability mission across North America. Robb joined the ERO Enterprise in 2013 when he was appointed the president and CEO of the Western Electricity Coordinating Council (WECC), the Regional Entity serving the Western Interconnection.

Robb has more than 35 years of experience in the energy sector as an engineer, consultant, and senior executive. Prior to becoming WECC's CEO, he held three major leadership roles in the industry as senior vice president at Northeast Utilities (now Eversource Energy); senior vice president at Reliant Energy (now part of NRG Energy); and partner at McKinsey & Company. During his 15-year career at McKinsey, he worked closely with prominent electric power companies in California, western Canada, the Pacific Northwest, and the Rocky Mountain states and served clients in Western Europe, South America, and New Zealand. He has been a frequent speaker at industry events on the evolution of the electric power system, cyber security, integration of variable generation, and the increasing interdependency of electric and natural gas reliability.

Robb is a member of the Electricity Subsector Coordinating Council (ESCC) and serves on the United States Energy Association Board as well as a NERC trustee. In 2020, he was appointed chair of the Group of Experts on Cleaner Energy Systems for the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe. He has served on the boards of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art in Hartford, Connecticut, the Houston Symphony, the Woodland Park Zoo in Seattle, and as a policy advisor to the Bay Area Economic Forum in San Francisco.

Robb earned a bachelor’s degree in Chemical Engineering from Purdue University in Indiana and a master's degree in Business Administration from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

Profile Type: 
Speaker
December 14th, 2022

Utilities in at least three regions of the country -- the Midwest, the South and New England --  and Texas should be prepared for winter energy shortfalls and load shedding. This is the consensus of numerous prognostications, including from the North American Electric Reliability Corporation (NERC), the industry’s own forecaster.

November 2nd, 2022

Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) is a critical technology that will allow to keep providing affordable and reliable energy, at the lowest cost while limiting carbon emissions to the atmosphere, especially in hard to decarbonize sectors of the energy system. Furthermore, achieving net zero CO2 emissions to the atmosphere might not be sufficient, and negative emissions technologies are being actively investigated.

SUPPORTING THE CLEAN, SECURE ENERGY TRANSITION ACROSS EUROPE AND EURASIA
Job Title: 
President
Organization: 
Kanata America

Kanata Clean Power & Climate Technologies, Canadian parent company of Kanata America, is a First Nations co-founded and invested clean energy development and management company with a focus on Tribal and First Nations co-development. Jeremy has spent the past years in clean energy project development with Tribal and First Nations after 15 years of energy-related Wall Street experience at Morgan Stanley, Société Générale and RBC in New York, Hong Kong and Toronto, respectively. Bachelor in business administration with a masters in economics from McGill University.

Job Title: 
Former Arizona State Senator

Senator Carlyle W. Begay was born on the Navajo Nation and he is Tó’tsohnii (Big Water), born for Kinyaa’áanii (Towering House) clans. His maternal grandparents are Tl'izi lani (Many Goats clan). His paternal grandparents are also of the Tl'izi lani (Many Goats clan). Senator Begay is a lifetime resident of Arizona and grew up on the Navajo Nation near Black Mesa and was raised under the teachings of his ancestry, instilling in him the importance of remembering the story of his people and carrying it on to his descendants.

Senator Begay graduated from the University of Arizona with a Bachelor of Science degree in Molecular and Cellular Biology and was a student in the Minority Medical Education Program at the University of Arizona’s College of Medicine. After graduation, he continued his education and attended the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University. He also attended the Arizona International College’s Natural Sciences and Mathematics program in Tucson, Arziona; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Heath’s Winter Institute, in Baltimore, Maryland; and the Harvard School of Public Health’s Public Health Studies program in Boston, Massachusetts.

Through these experiences Senator Begay accrued a tremendous acumen and passion for health and education policy and business. He has experience in the management of health care organizations, managed care, health care market structure, and health care delivery. Senator Begay has also devoted much of his career to improving education for all and ensuring, regardless of location or race, every person receives the first-rate education they deserve. He got involved in education early while a student teacher at the U of A with a program called Collaboration for the Advancement of Teaching Technology and Science (CATTS), which was a K-12 program based at the University of Arizona that partnered with local under-served school districts to improve science, mathematics and technology learning. Even today Senator Begay continues to work with organizations that seek to have more American Indians preparing for health professions to improve the quality of care provided for and by American Indians in Arizona. Furthermore, Senator Begay currently serves as Chair of the Community Advisory Board to the Partnership for the Center of American Indian Resiliency (CAIR) at Northern Arizona University and the U of A. The project integrates comprehensive research, training and outreach to decrease health disparities found in Native American populations.

As a former State Senator he had worked to give a voice to rural and Native American communities and his constituents as a whole. He served on the Senate committees of Education; Health and Human Services; Transportation; and Commerce & Workforce Development. Additionally, he served as co-chair of the Native American Caucus, and Chair of the Senator Ad-Hoc Committee on Indian Affairs.  

Today Senator Begay continues to serve his people as a Federal and State government affairs advisor to the Office of the Speaker for the 24th Navajo Nation Council. He represents and advises Navajo Nation leadership on numerous policy issues in Washington, DC and for the states of Arizona, Utah, Colorado and New Mexico.  Senator Begay also advises other Federal, State and Tribal clients in the areas of healthcare management, broadband investments, resource management, energy and infrastructure development
Profile Type: 
Speaker
December 5th, 2022

Our National discussion on energy, climate adaption, and transitions between primary energy sources needs to include Tribes and our Tribal communities.  Tribes and our peoples have been at the forefront of Energy Security for the United States and thus the World, especially in the production of Uranium, Coal, Oil, and Gas, and in the production of electricity through Hydropower.  Just like in the past, we will continue to play an important and integral role in that production as well as in new production of Rare Earth and Critical Minerals, Hydrogen and Ammonia, and in other pr

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