Job Title: 
Research Geologist
Organization: 
U.S. Geological Survey
Sean Brennan is co-project lead for the Carbon and Energy Storage, Emissions, and Economics Project at the U.S. Geological Survey. His main areas of expertise include sedimentology, stratigraphy, low-temperature geochemistry, and subsurface fluid systematics. His research has focused on assessing non-energy gases in the subsurface, creating assessment methodologies and completing assessments of subsurface fluid resources, and working to understand the creation, migration, and entrapment of various naturally occurring fluids.  
December 7th, 2023

The hydrogen economy offers a potentially sustainable, long-term pathway to support the U.S. decarbonization strategy and energy security. With the increasing attention on decarbonization strategies for the U.S. economy, reliable storage of large volumes of surplus electrical energy from renewable sources (e.g., via conversion to hydrogen) presents challenges and opportunities.

November 29th, 2023

The Women in Energy series is a joint project between USEA and USAID to help improve the visibility of women's participation and leadership in the traditionally male-dominated energy sector and their active participation in policies and gender outcomes in organizations.

November 28th, 2023
The United States Energy Association would like to congratulate Former Acting Executive Director & Member of the Board of Directors, of USEA and Of Counsel and Chair of Duane Morris, Sheila Slocum Hollis. Ms. Hollis is the 2023 recipient of the American Bar Association Lifetime Achievement Award in Environmental, Energy or Resources Law and Policy.
Job Title: 
Community Engagement Lead
Organization: 
RMI
With over two decades in environmental science, pedagogy, and community engagement, Dr. McClellan has exemplified collaborative leadership and stakeholder connection. Her efforts are fueled by a dedication to environmental and climate justice and include leading door-to-door environmental justice research, gathering data that contributed to the groundswell of support to end neighborhood oil drilling in L.A. An award-winning professor and Fulbright recipient, she has taught Environmental Justice, Environmental Science, and Research Methods. As Community Engagement Lead at RMI, Dr. McClellan embeds environmental justice principles and practices in heavy industry and transport community engagement initiatives, coaching industry to develop strategies for meaningful two-way engagement with diverse stakeholder representation. Through her leadership, she steers heavy industry and transport corporations towards alignment with community needs and perspectives.  
Credentials: 
PhD
Job Title: 
Assistant Director and Geospatial Analyst
Organization: 
Montana State University

Born and raised in Montana, Jackson Rose is a resource geographer and GIS professional whose work includes geospatial and critical mineral policy analysis in the U.S. West. Jackson's scholarly research looks at rural communities that host large-scale underground mining projects, with a focus on non-regulatory agreements between community organizations and international mining companies.

Prior to accepting a faculty position at Montana State University, Jackson worked for two years in White Sulphur Springs, Montana, where he served as Executive Director of the Meagher County Stewardship Council, a grassroots group negotiating a community benefits agreement around an impending copper mine.

Rod Kuckro has been a journalist in Washington for more than 40 years. He is currently a freelancer with a focus on energy and climate issues, having left full-time work at E&E News in March 2020 where for the previous six years he had reported on the rapid and disruptive transformation of electric sector business models with a focus on the issues, people and politics driving that transformation.

Prior to joining E&E, Rod was editor in chief for Platts’ electric power group where he oversaw three daily publications related to the US electricity and natural gas sectors. Before that he was editor of Oil Daily.

He began his career in Washington with Gannett News Service and after that corresponded for the Oakland Tribune and The Cincinnati Enquirer.

He joined McGraw-Hill’s Washington bureau in 1981, where he first covered U.S. energy policy following the run-up in oil prices after the Iranian revolution.

Over his career, he has covered the White House, Congress, the Federal Reserve and the development of the Internet and related telecommunications technologies.

He has been featured as an expert on CNN, CNBC, PBS and NPR, among others.

Rod is an alumnus of Georgetown University and lives in Alexandria, Va. with his wife Melissa.

Job Title: 
Director of Carbon Removal
Organization: 
Carbon Solutions
Dr. Jonathan Ogland-Hand is the Director of Carbon Removal at Carbon Solutions, a mission-driven, fast-growing business focusing on low-carbon energy Research & Development and Software & Services. He has been developing the Sequestration of CO2 Tool to quantify the cost and capacity of CO2 storage for the past four years. Jonathan holds a PhD in environmental science, a BS in mechanical engineering, and was a postdoctoral researcher for 2 years in the earth science department at ETH Zurich in Switzerland.
Credentials: 
PhD
Job Title: 
Cofounder and Chairman Emeritus
Organization: 
Rocky Mountain Institute

Physicist Amory Lovins (1947– ) is cofounder (1982) and chairman emeritus of RMI, which he served as chief scientist 2007–19 and now supports as a contractor and trustee; energy advisor to major firms and governments in 70+ countries for 45+ years; author of 31 books and more than 700 papers; and an integrative designer of superefficient buildings, factories, and vehicles.

He has received the Blue Planet, Volvo, Zayed, Onassis, Nissan, Shingo, and Mitchell Prizes, the MacArthur and Ashoka Fellowships, the Happold, Benjamin Franklin, and Spencer Hutchens Medals, 12 honorary doctorates, and the Heinz, Lindbergh, Right Livelihood (“alternative Nobel”), National Design, and World Technology Awards. In 2016, the President of Germany awarded him the Officer’s Cross of the Order of Merit (Bundesverdienstkreuz 1. Klasse).

A Harvard and Oxford dropout and former Oxford don, he’s an honorary US architect, Swedish engineering academician, and Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (UK). He has taught at ten universities, most recently the Naval Postgraduate School (Professor of Practice 2011–17) and Stanford University, where he’s currently Adjunct Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and a Scholar of the Precourt Institute for Energy—but only teaching topics he’s never formally studied, so as to retain beginner’s mind. He served in 2011–18 on the National Petroleum Council and has advised the US Departments of Energy and Defense.

Time has named him one of the world’s 100 most influential people, and Foreign Policy, one of the 100 top global thinkers. His latest books, mostly coauthored, include Natural Capitalism (1999, www.natcap.org), Small Is Profitable (2002, www.smallisprofitable.org), Winning the Oil Endgame (2004, www.oilendgame.com), The Essential Amory Lovins (2011), and Reinventing Fire (2011, www.reinventingfire.com).

His main recent efforts include supporting RMI’s collaborative synthesis, for China’s National Development and Reform Commission, of an ambitious efficiency-and-renewables trajectory that informed the 13th Five Year Plan; helping the Government of India design transformational mobility; and exploring how to make integrative design the new normal, so investments to energy efficiency can yield increasing rather than diminishing returns.

His avocations include fine-art mountain and landscape photography (www.judyhill.com), writing, music, linguistics, great-ape language and conservation, and Taoism

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