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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140327
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140328
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140327T174014Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154940Z
UID:10310-1395878400-1395964799@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Richard Miller ’87 of ConEd Examines Path to More Competitive and Green Electric System
DESCRIPTION:How do we move toward a greener electric system while encouraging competitive markets and reliable utility access? Richard Miller ’87\, director of the Energy Markets Policy Group for Con Edison (ConEd) addressed this issue as the third speaker in the Energy Policy Discussion series hosted by the Frank J. Guarini Center on Environmental and Land Use Law. \nBefore entering into a complex discussion of the electric system’s future\, Miller provided a layman’s overview of how electricity moves from generation plants to customers.  \nWhen it comes to electricity\, he emphasized\, a balance needs to be maintained between supply and demand. That is\, when customers’ demand rises\, generation—the supply—needs to be increased to meet it. But there is another option: customers can decrease their demand to meet the supply. This alternative\, in which the customer reduces its demand\, is called “demand response.” \n“One of the goals of managing that electric system to generally try to make it cleaner and greener\,” Miller said\, “is to figure out ways that we can use that demand response more.” \nFrom 1998 to 2003\, Miller was senior vice president for energy at the New York City Economic Development Corporation. In 2003\, he moved to ConEd\, where he served as assistant general counsel\, stepping into his current role in 2008. \nHe discussed the restructuring that took place in the 1990s\, after which ConEd—which had been fully vertically integrated—would no longer control the electricity from the plants to the power lines to the customer. The federal government had the power plants sold off\, turning them into a separate industry; hand-in-hand with this\, power generators were given open-access to the transmission system which in turn came to be overseen by new agencies like the New York Independent Systems Operator (NYISO). The goal: increased competition. \nLegally\, this also meant a major jurisdictional change: this market\, which once fell under state jurisdiction\, was suddenly subject to federal jurisdiction. The NYISO\, for example\, answers to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). \nThis change has raised a key question: How can states promote renewable power despite this jurisdictional change? Miller highlighted Maryland’s beleaguered attempt to accomplish this goal. He also discussed plans to build more transmission for public policy reasons\, and the benefits and disadvantages of relying on “demand response” to decrease customer demand. \nIn his closing\, he referred the address given by Audrey Zibelman\, chair of the New York State Public Service Commission\, during the “Utility Industry of the Future” symposium at NYU Law. She stated that the most cost-effective way to get to a better system is to use competitive markets. \n“We all want a greener and cleaner system\,” Miller concluded\, “but we all want to do it in the least expensive way possible.”
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/richard-miller-87-of-coned-examines-path-to-more-competitive-and-green-electric-system/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20140417T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20140417T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140417T173706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154936Z
UID:10306-1397759400-1397764800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:The Practice of Energy Law
DESCRIPTION:The Practice of Energy Law\, Insights from NYU Law Alumni at the forefront of the energy law field \nHave you ever considered practicing energy law? Curious about what opportunities might exist in the field? Join us for a casual dinner with two NYU Law alumni who are at the forefront of the profession. \nPlease RSVP here. Students only. **Pizza will be served** \nSpeakers: \n\nEli M. Katz (LLM ’04)\, Partner\, Chadbourne & Parke LLP\nPhyllis J. Kessler (’72)\, Of Counsel\, Duane Morris LLP\n\nEli M. Katz is a transactional lawyer who focuses on providing tax\, legal and commercial advice to a broad range of clients in the energy and financial sectors. Many of Mr. Katz’s clients are active in the renewable energy and clean-tech industries where they operate across many sectors such as wind\, solar\, geothermal\, biomass\, biofuels\, transmission\, demand side management and energy saving retrofits. Mr. Katz regularly advises his clients on energy tax credits\, government incentive programs\, project development and finance\, mergers and acquisitions\, capital raising and deployment structures and all forms of leasing transactions both in the United States and abroad. Over the past few years\, Mr. Katz has led pioneering transactions in the renewable energy sector including the first leveraged lease of a wind farm\, the first levered tax equity transaction to use the Section 1603 cash grant and one of the first tax equity transactions with a prepaid power contract. Some of his recent client representations include NRG Energy\, Terra-Gen Power\, LS Power\, First Reserve Energy Investors\, Metlife\, the AES Corporation\, First Wind\, GE Capital\, US Bancorp\, and Goldman Sachs. \nPhyllis J. Kessler practices in the area of energy law\, with a focus on provision of electricity and gas through alternative sources\, representing both providers and customers for energy services\, and energy efficiency. As part of this practice\, she advises clients on on-site generation\, renewables (solar\, wind and biofuel)\, interconnection\, line extension\, energy efficiency projects\, power and gas marketing\, clean coal projects\, submetering\, mission critical and many other issues related to the deregulated energy markets. She has significant experience representing and counseling clients on all aspects of regulatory and deregulation business issues associated with regulated and deregulated energy issues. Ms. Kessler represents power authorities\, energy marketers\, energy project developers\, financial institutions and large customers (industrial\, commercial\, data center\, apartment house\, non-profit\, university and hospital). She also appears on behalf of such clients in federal and state court energy litigation matters and regulatory proceedings in various states.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/the-practice-of-energy-law/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Golding Lounge\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140513
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140514
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140513T173445Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154934Z
UID:10303-1399939200-1400025599@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Dept. of Energy / GridWise Alliance Workshop on the Future of the Grid
DESCRIPTION:On May 13\, 2014\, the Guarini Center hosted the fourth regional “Future of the Grid” workshop organized by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Electricity and the GridWise Alliance. The workshop examined the electricity industry’s vision of how the grid must evolve to satisfy America’s changing energy needs. \nSpeaking at the opening of the workshop\, Guarini Center Senior Fellow Jonathan Schrag highlighted that the Department of Energy’s workshops coincide with the New York State Public Service Commission’s (PSC) initiative to transform New York State’s energy industry and regulatory practices. “New York State’s energy leadership has opened a window of opportunity to reshape electricity markets based on sound technical and economic analysis\,” he said. \nIn the months ahead\, the Guarini Center will continue to work closely with the various stakeholders in the PSC proceedings to devise innovative policy proposals that promote environmentally and economically sound outcomes.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/dept-of-energy-gridwise-alliance-workshop-on-the-future-of-the-grid/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20140910T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20140910T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140910T173212Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154926Z
UID:10300-1410372000-1410379200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Evolving Financial Landscape for Renewable Energy
DESCRIPTION:Renewable energy has come to a financial crossroads: The renewable electricity production tax credit (PTC)\, which has fueled the growth of wind energy\, expired on January 1 of this year\, and Congress has yet to decide whether to renew it. The solar investment tax credit (ITC)\, which has encouraged the growth of solar\, will expire in 2016. How can the US continue to drive the growth of renewable energy without relying on tax subsidies? What can our government do for us? \n\nIn his opening remarks for the “Evolving Financial Landscape for Renewable Energy” panel held on Wednesday\, September 10\, former Governor George Pataki gave a corporate spin to John F. Kennedy’s famous words on the subject: “Don’t go to Washington to say\, ‘What can you do to give us a chance to have green energy?’ Drive the technology. Change the paradigm so that we can have solar panels that outperform traditional energy. Go to the marketplace.” \nThe power of consumer choice was the theme of the night’s conversation\, which was hosted by the Frank J. Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law. Eli Katz LLM ’04\, partner at Chadbourne & Parke\, moderated the panel\, which featured Neil Auerbach LLM ’84\, CEO and managing partner of Hudson Clean Energy Partners; Steve Corneli\, senior vice president of Policy & Strategy at NRG Energy; Dana Sands\, managing director at TAG Energy Partners; and Jason Segal\, managing director at Aldwych Capital Partners and a managing partner of the Environment and Renewables Group in New York. Pataki himself is now counsel at Chadbourne and Parke\, which sponsored the event\, where his practice focuses on energy\, environmental\, and corporate matters. \n\nWe don’t have to choose between having either a vibrant economy or renewable energy\, Pataki stressed\, calling that a “false dichotomy and a false choice.” Renewable energy can be economically competitive. As an example\, he pointed to the rebuilding of Battery Park City after 9/11. When he insisted that all new buildings be constructed green\, companies balked at what they called a financial burden. Yet Solaire\, the 27-story residential tower now adjacent to the World Trade Center site and the first green residential high-rise in North America\, gets a premium on rentals because it’s green. \n“Invent\, invest\, create\,” he told the audience\, “and allow us to have the confidence that regardless of the political situation\, the economic situation and the social situation are going to make renewable energy the energy of the future.” \nThe last ten years have shown a “truly phenomenal” cost reduction for renewables\, Corneli pointed out\, thanks in part to innovative business models and advances in technology. The price-competitiveness has changed the landscape. “We are on the cusp of a whole new set of drivers for renewable deployment that are not policy-independent but they’re not as policy-dependent as our industry has been in the past.” \nAs the cost of renewables decreases\, consumers will be likelier to switch to renewables\, he said. Meanwhile\, utilities will raise their prices to make up for their lost revenue—thereby making renewables even more attractive. \nDespite the promise of all these advances\, however\, Auerbach asserted that renewables still needs some measure of “affirmative action” from the government. First\, consumer demand for power is not increasing\, so there isn’t a drive to adopt new power sources; indeed\, even as we use more electric devices and equipment\, these devices themselves have become more energy-efficient. Secondly\, because renewables provide an intermittent source of energy (for instance\, solar energy is hard to come by at night)\, utility companies are less willing to go through the complex\, expensive process of integrating them into the transmission and distribution system. \nRegardless of these challenges\, Auerbach speculated that three years from now\, as more communities start moving off-grid and more consumers adopt “behind-the-meter” technologies like solar panel arrays\, “The very function of the electric utility is going to be debated.” \n\n 
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/evolving-financial-landscape-for-renewable-energy/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140924
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140925
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140924T172727Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154923Z
UID:10294-1411516800-1411603199@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Roundtable with Peruvian Minister of Environment
DESCRIPTION:Countries have agreed to write a new climate agreement to begin in 2020 and replace the Kyoto Protocol. The agreement will be finalized at the 21st UN Climate Convention Conference of the Parties (COP) in 2015 in Paris\, but the text of the agreement will be finished this year at COP20 in Lima in December. \nAs host of COP20\, Manual Pulgar Vidal\, Minister of the Environment for Peru will be the President of the COP. The Peruvian COP Presidency and the Guarini Center are hosting an academic roundtable on issues related to climate change\, and in particular\, related to the outcome of the Lima COP.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/roundtable-with-peruvian-minister-of-environment/
LOCATION:NY
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://guarinicenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/IMG_67391.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140924
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140925
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20140924T172945Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154918Z
UID:10296-1411516800-1411603199@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Green Trade and Climate Action on the Road to COP21
DESCRIPTION:Shifting to a cleaner energy mix is essential to limit global temperature rise to the agreed 2-degree Celsius target as highlighted by the latest IPCC report. In order to achieve this\, costs of renewable energy have to come down and markets need to be strengthened so as to allow for a scale-up of innovation\, production\, and deployment of sustainable energy technologies. Trade policy has an important role to play in this respect. The past few years have seen significant political momentum toward bringing down trade barriers in some of the relevant clean energy goods. Examples include the APEC initiative to reduce tariffs on a list of environmental goods\, US President Barack Obama’s Climate Action Plan\, and the launch of trade negotiations on an environmental goods agreement (EGA) in July this year by 14 like-minded WTO members. \nThe launch of EGA negotiations offers a timely opportunity for trade to effectively contribute to climate action if delegations involved identify\, include\, and prioritise clean energy goods as a first deliverable. The initiative has the potential to contribute positively through the upcoming COP 20 in Lima to the much-anticipated COP 21 in Paris in December 2015. Against this background\, ICTSD and the Guarini Center (NYU School of Law) will convene a dialogue on green trade. The purpose of the dialogue is to raise awareness of the role of trade in climate change and sustainable energy among a non-trade audience; the event will underscore the positive role trade-related initiatives can play for climate action. The dialogue will involve the climate constituency in the process in order to ensure that a future environmental trade agreement delivers for climate change. \nSpeakers \nJames Bacchus (Chair\, Global Practice at Greenberg Traurig)\nRichard Stewart (Professor\, NYU School of Law)\nMichael Liebreich (Chief Executive\, Bloomberg New Energy Finance\, United Kingdom)\nRicardo Meléndez-Ortiz\, (Chief Executive Officer\, ICTSD)\nSourabh Sen (Chairman and Co-Founder\, Astonfield Renewables)
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/green-trade-and-climate-action-on-the-road-to-cop21/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20141103T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20141103T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152317
CREATED:20141103T182344Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154913Z
UID:10290-1415039400-1415044800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Reforming New York’s Energy Vision: Implications for Wholesale Electricity Markets
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by Latham & Watkins LLP \nOn November 3rd\, the Guarini Center held an event titled\, Reforming New York’s Energy Vision: Implications for Wholesale Electricity Markets at NYU Law. The event addressed the New York Public Service Commission’s “Reforming the Energy Vision (REV)” initiative to reform New York’s electric energy industry and regulatory practices to promote greater system-wide efficiency\, greater deployment of renewable energy and “distributed” energy resources\, and greater use of technologies\, products and services to increase demand elasticity and efficiency. The REV could have profound operating and legal implications for wholesale power markets in New York (and potentially in other parts of the U.S.). This event provided a forum for experts to discuss these implications and the factors that should be considered while the REV initiative is still under consideration by the New York Public Service Commission. \n\nOpening remarks by: \nMichael Gergen (’92)\, Partner\, Latham & Watkins LLP \nPanelists:\nClarke Bruno (’92)\, Senior Vice President and General Counsel\, Anbaric Transmission\nRichard B. Miller (’87)\, Director\, Energy Markets Policy Group\, Con Edison\nJohn P. Reese\, Senior Vice President\, U.S. Power Generating Company \nModerated by:\nDavid L. Schwartz\, Partner\, Latham & Watkins LLP \nMonday\, November 3\, 2014 6:30 – 8pm\nWine and cheese reception to follow\nNYU School of Law\nFaculty Library (3rd Floor)\, Vanderbilt Hall\n40 Washington Square South\nNew York\, NY 10012 \n\n  \n \nLatham & Watkins LLP is dedicated to working with clients to help them achieve their business goals and overcome legal challenges anywhere in the world. From a global platform of offices in the world’s major financial\, business and regulatory centers\, the firm’s lawyers help clients succeed. \n\nSpeaker Bios:\n Michael Gergen a partner in Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office\, is a member of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice as well as the Project Finance Practice. \nMr. Gergen has extensive experience developing practical applications of economics\, finance and regulatory law to assist clients involved in the electric\, natural gas and other network industries in the United States and internationally. Mr. Gergen represents entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, natural gas transportation\, storage and distribution\, electric and natural gas marketing and trading\, and finance\, as well as international governments and financial institutions. Mr. Gergen also assists clients regarding federal and state financing support and incentive programs for clean energy technologies\, products and services. \nMr. Gergen has assisted clients on a wide range of transactional\, controversy\, policy and legislative matters and has represented clients both in commercial negotiations and before various federal and state regulatory agencies\, including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and various state public utility commissions\, and numerous federal and state courts and arbitral bodies. Mr. Gergen also has served as an economist for an investor-owned public utility\, as well as an economic consultant for a state energy commission. \nMr. Gergen is listed as a leading energy attorney in Who’s Who Legal and in Chambers USA\, which describes him as having “developed a positive reputation in the industry as ‘a quick\, clever and creative lawyer.’” He has given a variety of speeches on energy regulatory and policy matters. He is a member of the Federal Energy Bar Association and the American Bar Association. Mr. Gergen was selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 as a recommended attorney in Energy Law. Mr. Gergen is an Adjunct Professor of Law and is a member of the Board of Advisors for the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law. \n\nClarke Bruno\, Clarke Bruno oversees Anbaric’s transmission projects in the Mid-Atlantic region and helps lead its microgrid business. He has over two decades of experience in law\, energy and environmental policy\, and project development. As counsel to former New Jersey Governor Corzine\, he helped craft the State’s initiatives to upgrade the grid\, spur renewable energy projects\, and increase infrastructure investments. During Mayor Bloomberg’s first term in New York City\, Mr. Bruno won dismissal of four major class action lawsuits. Before entering government\, he was a regulatory lawyer and litigator for nine years and clerked for a federal judge for one year. Mr. Bruno chairs the NYC Bar Association’s energy committee for the 2012-2015 term. \nMr. Bruno graduated with honors from Swarthmore College where he won a Thomas J. Watson fellowship and cum laude from New York University School of Law where he was awarded an Arthur Garfield Hays fellowship. \n\nRichard B. Miller\, is Director of the Energy Markets Policy Group at Con Edison where he is responsible for federal energy policy issues\, particularly as they relate to the operation of wholesale markets and the bulk electric transmission system. Previously\, he was an assistant general counsel in the regulatory services department at Con Edison where he worked on legal matters relating to the Con Edison steam system\, renewable power and energy efficiency. From 1998-2003\, he was Senior Vice-President for Energy at the New York City Economic Development Corporation (where he oversaw City energy policy). Prior to 1998\, he was an energy regulatory attorney for Cohen\, Dax & Koenig in Albany\, New York\, and a litigation associate at Cohen\, Weiss and Simon and Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City. \nHe is a graduate of Amherst College and New York University School of Law. \n\nJohn Reese\, a Senior Vice President of Governmental Affairs for US Power Generating Company. Mr. Reese has been responsible for ongoing communications with city\, state and federal officials and energy policy-making bodies on wholesale electric markets\, and environmental and electric regulatory legislative issues. He is also responsible for project development including ongoing proposals to add generation in Brooklyn and Queens. \nPrior to joining US Power Generating Company\, Mr. Reese served as both Executive Deputy of the New York State Public Service Commission (2006-2007) and as a Senior Policy Advisor at the Commission from 2003-2006. As Vice President of Governmental Affairs for Reliant/Orion Power Holdings\, Mr. Reese represented the New York City assets now held by US Power Generating Company as well as over fifty low impact hydroelectric facilities throughout the northeast. Previously\, Mr. Reese served as the Deputy Director of the Independent Power Producers of New York\, Sr. Technical Advisor to the US Department of Energy\, and Director of Development and Evaluation in the New York State Energy Office. He served on the New York Governor’s and Mayor’s Task Forces for Greenhouse Gas Emissions\, the Executive Committee and Board of Directors of the Independent Power Producers of New York\, and serves as an advisor to the New York City Fund Clean Tech Committee\, the Chariot Companies\, the NYSERDA environmental research programs and Windinspire . \nMr. Reese received his MBA from Russell Sage College and his BA from Pennsylvania State University. \n\n\n\n\n\n\nDavid Schwartz is a partner in the Finance Department of Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office. He serves as global Chair of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice\, is a member of the Project Finance Group\, and is Co-chair of the firm’s Global Energy – Power Industry Group. He has extensive experience representing entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, electric and gas marketing and trading\, and gas transportation and distribution. \nMr. Schwartz has been active in the formation of the developing electricity markets in the United States; led transactional and regulatory teams in mergers and acquisitions and divestitures of energy companies and assets; litigated contract\, rate and transmission access disputes; and drafted federal and state energy legislation. He also has extensive experience in negotiating power purchase and sale agreements\, electric transmission agreements\, natural gas transportation agreements\, energy management agreements\, and electric and gas interconnection agreements. \nMr. Schwartz regularly advises clients on energy matters before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)\, various state public utility commissions\, the US Department of Justice (DOJ)\, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)\, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)\, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Department of Energy (DOE). \nMr. Schwartz is consistently recognized as a top energy attorney in Corporate Counsel Magazine\, Best Lawyers in America\, Who’s Who Legal: Energy\, Chambers USA\, Chambers Global\, and The Legal 500 US\, which recently selected him as a “Leading Lawyer” for his transactional energy practice. \nMr. Schwartz is a member of the American Bar Association and has held leadership positions in the Energy Bar Association.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/reforming-new-yorks-energy-vision-implications-for-wholesale-electricity-markets/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Faculty Library\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20141118
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20141119
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20141118T181842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154906Z
UID:10284-1416268800-1416355199@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Reforming Electricity Regulation in New York State: Lessons from the United Kingdom
DESCRIPTION:On November 18\, 2014\, the Guarini Center hosted an invitation only roundtable discussion exploring applications of British electricity regulatory policy for New York State. \nThe roundtable explored the U.K.’s experience in developing\, negotiating and implementing RIIO. Participants at the meeting included leading British representatives from government\, industry\, and academia as well as American economists\, environmental advocates\, electric industry representatives and New York State Department of Public Service staff. \nThis workshop was made possible by the generous support of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.  \nRead the roundtable report and the accompanying issue brief on utility regulation in the UK. \n 
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/reforming-electricity-regulation-in-new-york-state-lessons-from-the-united-kingdom/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20150211
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20150212
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20150211T181446Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154901Z
UID:10281-1423612800-1423699199@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:NY Green Bank: Looking Back on Its First Year and Plans for the Future
DESCRIPTION:Caroline Angoorly\, Chief Operating Officer & Managing Director\, NY Green Bank\nAfter agreeing in principle to its first seven transactions\, what’s next for the NY Green Bank? \nOn February 11\, 2015\, the Guarini Center hosted Caroline Angoorly\, Chief Operating Officer & Managing Director of NY Green Bank\, and Paul Francis\, Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Guarini Center\, to discuss this question. \nThe mission of the NY Green Bank is to accelerate clean energy deployment in New York State by helping to open up financing markets for clean energy projects. To accomplish this mission\, Angoorly explained\, NY Green Bank focuses on transactions at the “near frontier” of commercial investment – transactions that are scalable\, replicable\, and based on proven technologies\, yet not being undertaken by commercial lenders because they involve a structure\, scale\, or tenor of investment that is outside the norm for commercial lenders. The Bank is a division of NYSERDA. \nAngoorly described a successful first year for the NY Green Bank. The Bank has allocated its initial capital of $200 million to seven transactions that have been agreed to in principle; the Bank’s investment in these transactions has been matched by private sector investment of $600 million. \nFour categories of financial products have been offered this year by the NY Green Bank – (1) credit enhancement to alleviate default risk; (2) warehousing/aggregation to provide short-term support; (3) asset loans and investments to provide long-term support; (4) and composites of those three categories. These categories of products are a result of the NY Green Bank’s collaborative Request for Proposals process\, which Angoorly emphasized is not based on a pre-existing slate of specific products. This flexibility to the needs of the market\, Angoorly said\, is a key component of the Bank’s strategy to accelerate clean energy deployment in New York State. \nAngoorly also discussed the capitalization of NY Green Bank. Initially contemplated at $1 billion\, capitalization of the remaining $800 million is subject to approval in an ongoing proceeding at the New York State Department of Public Service. In making the case for the need to capitalize the remaining $800 million\, Angoorly pointed to a Booz & Company study estimating clean energy investment opportunities in New York State at over $85 billion. \nGoing forward\, said Angoorly\, the NY Green Bank must build on its success and execute. The Bank will continue strengthening its portfolio\, its internal processes\, and its participation with other domestic and international green financing entities.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/ny-green-bank-looking-back-on-its-first-year-and-plans-for-the-future/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20150217T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20150217T143000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20150217T181155Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154855Z
UID:10278-1424160000-1424183400@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:American Gas Exports: Regulation\, Finance\, & International Trade
DESCRIPTION:On February 17\, 2015 the NYU Environmental Law Journal and NYU Environmental Law Society in conjunction with Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law \nInvite You to a Discussion on American Gas Exports: Regulation\, Finance\, & International Trade \nTo register please click here \nTuesday\, February 17\, 2015 8:00am – 2:30pm\nNYU School of Law\nLipton Hall\, D’Agostino Hall\n108 West Third Street\nNew York\, NY 10012 \nRSVP here 5 CLE credits available for both newly admitted and experienced attorneys. \nThis Symposium will provide a forum for experts in their field—representing government\, finance\, the legal practice and academia—to discuss the future of liquid natural gas exports from the United States. How much natural gas should\, and will\, the Department of Energy (DOE) approve to be exported? What are the financing implications of the recent changes to the DOE approval process? In what ways may the law of the World Trade Organization constrain U.S. policy regarding natural gas exports? These questions and more will be explored. \nIntroductory Remarks\nRichard Stewart\, Professor of Law\, NYU School of Law \nPanel One: Breaking Down the Public Interest Determination -The Limits of What the Government Will Approve\nRobert Fee\, Senior Advisor\, U.S. Department of Energy\nVignesh Gowrishankar\, Policy Manager\, NRDC\nSugandha Tuladhar\, NERA Economic Consulting\nKatrina Wyman\, Professor of Law\, NYU School of Law (moderator)\nAnthony Yuen\, Citi Group \nPanel Two: Bringing American Gas to Market – Financing and Infrastructure Issues\nJean-Pierre Boudrias\, Goldman Sachs\nTimothy Puko\, Energy Reporter\, The Wall Street Journal (moderator)\nRobert Seber\, Vinson & Elkins LLP\nEric Silverman\, Milbank\, Tweed\, Hadley & McCloy LLP\nBranko Terzic\, Former CEO & Commissioner\, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission \nKeynote Address and Lunch\nC. Boyden Gray\, Boyden Gray & Associates LLP \nPanel Three: International Trade Issues – Opportunities and Constraints posed by America’s International Trade Agreements\nAlan M. Dunn\, Stewart and Stewart\nSpencer Griffith JD ’82\, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP\nRobert Howse\, Professor of Law\, NYU School of Law\nJoanna Langille JD ’11\, NYU School of Law (moderator)
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/american-gas-exports-regulation-finance-international-trade/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20150226T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20150226T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20150226T180906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154849Z
UID:10276-1424952000-1424957400@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Considering A Career in Energy?
DESCRIPTION:Have you ever considered a career in energy law or policy? Curious about what opportunities might exist in the field? Join us for lunch with two NYU Law alumni who are at the forefront of the profession. \nPlease RSVP here. Students and alumni only \nThursday\, February 26th\, 12 to 1:30PM \nNew York University School of Law \nVanderbilt Hall Room 201 \nSpeakers: \n\nFrancesca Odell ’96\, Partner\, Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton\nJacob Jay Worenklein ’73\, Chairman and CEO\, US Grid Company\n\n\nSpeaker’s Bios: \nFrancesca Odell  \nMs. Odell’s practice focuses on mergers and acquisitions\, joint ventures\, private equity transactions and other financing transactions (including capital markets\, restructurings and project finance). Her practice is primarily cross-border\, focusing on Latin America\, and particularly Brazil. \nMs. Odell was recognized by The American Lawyer as a “Dealmaker of the Year\,” and is internationally distinguished as one of the best corporate lawyers practicing by Chambers Global\, Chambers USA\, Chambers Latin America\, The Legal 500 U.S.\, The Legal 500 Latin America and Latin Lawyer 250: Latin America’s Leading Business Law Firms. In 2013\, Ms. Odell was nominated for the “Finance Lawyer of the Year” award at the Chambers USA Women in Law Awards\, and was also highlighted in Latin Lawyer’s “Women In Law” issue celebrating the most inspiring women in the Latin American legal profession. She has also been named one of “Latin America’s Top 50 Legal Stars” by Latin Business Chronicle. Ms. Odell currently serves on the board of the Brazilian-American Chamber of Commerce\, and on the advisory board of Legal Outreach. She also serves as a board member and as the Secretary-Treasurer of Volunteers of Legal Service. \nMs. Odell joined the firm in 1996 and became a partner in 2005.  She received a J.D. degree from New York University School of Law\, where she was a staff editor of the Journal of International Law & Politics.  She received an undergraduate degree from the University of Wisconsin – Madison. \nMs. Odell is a member of the Bar of New York.  Her native language is English\, and she is fluent in Spanish and Portuguese.  \n  \nJacob Jay Worenklein \nJay is Chairman and CEO of US Grid Company. Prior to founding US Grid Company\, Jay served as a partner and co-head of Global Projects at Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld. He founded and served from 2003 to 2008 as Chairman and CEO of US Power Generating Company. From 1993 to 2003\, he served as global head of project finance at Lehman Brothers and then as global head of the energy\, power\, infrastructure and project finance sectors at Société Générale (which was named by Euromoney\, during the period of his leadership\, as the “World’s Best Project Finance Bank”). Jay practiced law at Milbank\, Tweed\, Hadley & McCloy from 1973 to 1993\, where he founded and headed the firm’s project finance and utility practices and served as a member of its three-person executive committee. Jay served on the Boards of Directors of numerous public and private companies in the U.S. and chaired the audit committees of several boards.In 2002\, Infrastructure Journal in London awarded him its inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award for contributions to the energy\, infrastructure and project finance sectors. Jay has served as an Adjunct Professor of Finance at the NYU Stern School of Business. He is also a member of the Executive Committee of the Committee for Economic Development (CED)\, a leading business organization.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/considering-a-career-in-energy-2/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Room 201\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20150304T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20150304T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20150304T180608Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221202T154949Z
UID:10274-1425470400-1425475800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:The Future of Natural Gas and Coal-Fired Generation
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by White and Case LLP \nWhat is the future of coal and natural gas as fuels for electricity generation in the United States? \nOn March 4\, 2015\, the Guarini Center hosted a panel to discuss this question. Panelists discussed the potential returns for investments in coal and gas generation; the extent of domestic gas supply; how the increase in renewables on the grid has differently affected the economics of coal and gas-fired generation; the impacts of federal environmental regulations on each fuel source; the status of carbon capture and sequestration projects and much more. \nSpeakers:\nCatherine Callaway\, Executive Vice President\, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer\, Dynegy Inc.\nRobert Mancini (’84)\, Managing Director & Co-Head of CPP-II\, The Carlyle Group\nThad Miller\, Executive Vice President\, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary\, Calpine Corp.\nJeffrey Pollard\, Managing Director\, Goldman Sachs\nMichael Shenberg (’85)\, Partner\, White and Case LLP \nSpeaker bios: \nCatherine Callaway has held the position of Executive Vice President\, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer of Dynegy Inc. since September 2011. Ms. Callaway leads Dynegy’s Legal\, Ethics and Compliance\, NERC and Contract Administration functions. Dynegy generates reliable\, environmentally responsible and affordable energy from its power stations located in the Midwest\, Northeast and West Coast. Dynegy’s fuel-diverse fleet of power stations can generate 13\,000 megawatts – about half from coal and half from natural gas plants – enough to power about 10 million homes. Through its retail electricity providers\, Homefield Energy and Dynegy Energy Services\, Dynegy serves residential\, municipal\, business and industrial customers in Illinois\, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Dynegy will double in size following the consummation of pending transactions with Duke and Energy Capital Partners. Ms. Callaway has been advising energy companies on legal matters for almost 25 years. Prior to joining Dynegy\, she was General Counsel of Reliant Energy and the Gulf Coast Region of NRG Energy and prior to that she held various legal positions with Calpine Corporation\, Reliant Resources\, Coastal Power and Chevron. Ms. Callaway earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Smith College and her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Texas. \nRobert (“Bob”) Mancini is a Managing Director and Co‐Head of CPP II. Mr. Mancini serves as Chairman of the Board of Cogentrix. Mr. Mancini is based in New York. \nPrior to joining Carlyle\, Mr. Mancini was a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs & Co.\, where he spent nearly twenty years. Most recently Mr. Mancini led the firm’s on‐balance sheet power asset business through Goldman’s wholly owned subsidiary\, Cogentrix Energy LLC\, where he was CEO. Mr. Mancini was instrumental in Goldman’s entry into the power asset business in 2003. Prior to 2003 Mr. Mancini was a member of the legal department where he eventually became the Deputy General Counsel of the Securities Division. Prior to joining Goldman\, Mr. Mancini spent ten years in private practice as a lawyer with Debevoise and Plimpton\, where he established that firm’s derivatives practice. \nMr. Mancini received his J.D. from New York University School of Law in 1984\, where he was a member of the Law Review\, and received his B.A. degree from Binghamton University in 1980\, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. \nThad Miller has been Executive Vice President\, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of Calpine Corporation\, the largest US independent power generator based on production\, where he has lead the Legal\, Governmental & Regulatory Affairs\, Internal Audit\, Compliance\, Corporate Communications and Insurance groups since 2008.  Prior to that he held various positions\, including Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of Texas Genco LLC\, an IPP;  an energy advisor to TPG\, a private equity firm;  Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of Orion Power Holdings\, Inc.\, an IPP;  Vice President of Goldman Sachs & Co.; and a partner with two New York law firms. Mr. Miller earned his Bachelor of Science degree from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and his Juris Doctor degree from St. John’s School of Law. In addition\, Mr. Miller was an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1973-76. \nJeffrey Pollard is a banker within the Natural Resources Group\, where he is focused on coverage and execution activities within the power and utility sector. He joined Goldman Sachs in 2006 as an associate and was named managing director in 2011. Prior to joining the firm\, Jeff was a power and utility banker from 2003 to 2006. Previously\, he served in several roles internationally and in the United States with the engineering and construction subsidiary of Halliburton Company from 1996 to 2001. Jeff earned a BS in Civil Engineering from the University of California at Berkeley in 1994. He also earned an MS in Structural Engineering from Purdue University in 1996 and an MBA from the Kellogg School of management in 2003. \nMichael Shenberg is a partner in the Firm’s Mergers and Acquisitions Practice Group in the New York office. A recognized leader in his field\, he focuses on energy M&A\, capital markets and financing transactions for the Firm. Mr. Shenberg has represented financial and strategic investors in numerous transactions involving the purchase or sale of energy assets\, including large portfolios\, single-asset deals and joint ventures. Additionally\, he advises on financings including restructurings\, and corporate and commercial matters for energy company clients.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/the-future-of-natural-gas-and-coal-fired-generation/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Greenberg Lounge\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20150429T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20150429T123000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20150429T170353Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215212Z
UID:10270-1430305200-1430310600@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:The German Energy Transition: Debating Implications for New York State
DESCRIPTION:On April 29th\, the Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law and the Ecologic Institute hosted a discussion about the German Energiewende (Energy Transition). This event provided an opportunity to speak with experts with first-hand insight into the Energiewende and lessons it may hold for policymakers in New York State as they pursue their own comprehensive energy reforms. \nWednesday\, April 29\, 2015\, 11:00AM – 12:30PM\nNYU School of Law\nLipton Hall\, D’Agostino Hall\n108 West Third Street\nNew York\, NY 10012 \n\nSpeakers:\nChris King\, Global Chief Regulatory Officer\, Smart Grid Services Siemens AG\nR. Andreas Kraemer\, Founder & Director Emeritus\, Ecologic Institute in Berlin\, Germany; and Founding Chairman\, Ecologic Institute US\nGeorg Maue\, First Secretary for Climate and Energy Issues\, German Embassy\nMichael Mehling\, Executive Director\, Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research\, Massachusetts Institute of Technology\nEleanor Stein\, Advisor for Special Projects\, New York State Public Service Commission\nJustin Gillis (moderator)\, Reporter\, New York Times \n  \nThis event was made possible by the generous support of the German Embassy in Washington DC and the Transatlantic Climate Bridge Program. \n  \n \nEcologic Institute is a transdisciplinary research organization focusing on environmental issues. \n  \n  \n\n Speaker Bios:\n \nJustin Gillis is a reporter for The New York Times who covers environmental science\, with a special focus on climate change. He was the author of a Times series called Temperature Rising that ran from 2010 to 2013 and updated readers on major developments in climate science\, winning the John B. Oakes Award for Distinguished Environmental Journalism from Columbia University. He was also the principal author in 2014 of a series called The Big Fix that critically examined proposed solutions to climate change. One article in that series analyzed the Energiewende and the lessons it might offer for countries like the United States. \n  \n \nChris King is Global Chief Regulatory Officer\, Smart Grid Services for Siemens AG. He is responsible for policy-oriented and strategic activities\, including market analysis and product strategy\, sharing his 30 years industry experience with regulators and legislators worldwide. He is co-founder and Chair of the Brussels-based Smart Energy Demand Coalition and on the Board of the Smart Grid Consumer Collaborative\, Association for Demand Response and Smart Grid\, and Silicon Valley Leadership Group. He is author of numerous industry articles\, book chapters\, and other publications on consumer response to dynamic pricing\, effects of energy information feedback\, smart grid business case\, and advanced metering and related technologies. Mr. King\, who has testified before the U.S. Congress on grid modernization issues\, holds masters degrees in science and business from Stanford University and a doctorate in law from Concord Law School. \n  \n \nR. Andreas Kraemer is Founder & Director Emeritus of Ecologic Institute in Berlin\, Germany and Founding Chairman (pro bono) of Ecologic Institute US  in Washington DC. He is currently Senior Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS) in Potsdam\, Germany\, Visiting Scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)\, Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research (CEEPR)\, and Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science and Adjunct Professor of German Studies at Duke University. His research focuses on the role and functions of science-based policy institutes or “think tanks” in theory and the practice in different political systems\, the interactions among policy domains and international relations\, and global governance on environment\, resources\, climate and energy. \nWith a strong background in institutional analysis and capacity building for sustainable development\, environmental policy\, and resource management\, R. Andreas Kraemer focuses on integrating environmental concerns into other policies\, notably EU General Affairs and external relations\, including trade\, development\, foreign affairs\, and security policy as well as the international fight against environmental crime. He is particularly engaged in strengthening Trans-Atlantic relations and cooperation in the wider Atlantic on environment\, climate\, and energy security. \nAndreas was born in Dortmund\, Germany\, and was trained in industrial business management in the petrochemical industry before studying environmental engineering and sciences at the Department of Environmental Technology of the Technische Universität Berlin and the Université des Paris Diderot. \n  \nGeorg Maue serves as First Secretary for Climate and Energy at the German Embassy in Washington\, DC. \nPrior to joining the Embassy\, Georg worked at the German Federal Ministry for the Environment\, Nature Conservation\, and Nuclear Safety\, with responsibility for climate and energy policy and various international environmental topics at the German Environmental Protection Agency. He collaborated on the ministry’s development of recent energy policies targeted at moving the German energy system in a cost-effective manner towards greater use of renewable energies and higher efficiency. \nGeorg holds an engineering degree in environmental technologies and received his PhD in microbiological treatment of contaminated soils\, from the Technical University of Berlin. \n  \n \nMichael Mehling is Executive Director of the Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). \nMichael Mehling helps coordinate research across MIT on the policy dimensions of energy\, climate change\, and the environment. He simultaneously holds appointments as Research Scientist with the MIT Energy Initiative (MITEI)\, and as Visiting Professor with the University of Strathclyde. Previously\, he was President of the Ecologic Institute in Washington DC\, an environmental think tank with partner offices in Berlin and Brussels\, and held research and teaching posts at Georgetown University and the Universities of Greifswald\, Helsinki and Constance. He also is the founder and editor-in-chief of the Carbon & Climate Law Review (CCLR)\, the first academic journal focused on legal aspects of climate change. He is a German attorney registered with the Bar of Berlin\, and has advised various German companies and the German government on issues of environmental and energy law. \n \n  \nEleanor Stein is Advisor for Special Projects at the New York Public Service Commission. \nEleanor Stein is currently tasked with project managing the REV proceedings at the New York Public Service Commission and is also pursuing an LLM in Climate Change Law at the University of Strathclyde\, in Glasgow.\nFor a period of ten years Eleanor Stein was the New York State Public Service Commission Administrative Law Judge in Albany\, New York presiding over the Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard proceeding; she also presided over New York’s Renewable Portfolio Standard proceeding until 2004. This was a collaboration and litigation of over 150 parties\, authoring in June 2004 a comprehensive decision recommending a landmark state environmental initiative to combat global warming with incentives for renewable resource-fueled power generation. From 2004-2006 Judge Stein was visiting associate professor at Albany Law School teaching transnational environmental law\, telecommunications law\, and other subjects; she is currently an adjunct professor teaching the law of climate change. She has published and lectured on climate change and renewable energy.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/the-german-energy-transition-debating-implications-for-new-york-state/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20151001
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20151002
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20151001T165954Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215202Z
UID:10266-1443657600-1443743999@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Cleaner\, Resilient Power for Island States
DESCRIPTION:For small island states that face the daunting challenges of high energy costs and climate change\, abandoning fossil fuels in favor of solar energy would appear to be an attractive solution. Many\, however\, have not adopted cheaper\, cleaner energy. To understand why\, the Law School’s Frank J. Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law is bringing representatives of island nations together with a solar energy company to explore the barriers to implementation of solar systems. \nOn October 1 the Guarini Center will lead “Cleaner\, Resilient Power for Island States\,” a workshop featuring keynote speaker Lyndon Rive\, CEO and cofounder of SolarCity\, a leading provider of solar power that is sponsoring the workshop\, and invited representatives from the energy ministries and utility providers of Palau\, the Seychelles\, the Cook Islands\, Republic of Marshall Islands\, and other island nations. \nBryce Rudyk LLM ’08\, climate program director at the Guarini Center and the senior legal adviser to the Alliance of Small Island States\, will co-lead the workshop as an expert in international climate negotiations. Rudyk will give opening remarks\, putting the workshop in the context of international efforts to secure commitments toward renewable energy in advance of the 21 Conference of the Parties in Paris in December. Guarini Center executive director Danielle Spiegel-Feld ’10 will also serve as co-lead and will moderate a panel on adoption challenges that have stifled renewable energy development in small island states in the past. \nSince the islands have minimal access to fossil fuels and are in remote locations\, all gas is imported by boat and transportation costs are high. In addition\, boat deliveries are sometimes delayed by hurricanes or cyclones\, creating energy insecurity. Switching to renewable energy could have many benefits\, including reduced costs. \nThe leading culprit blocking the adoption of the technology appears to be cost outlays. For small island states that have yet to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels\, said Spiegel-Feld\, “the intuition is a lot of this has to do with a lack of creativity in how to overcome the financing or legal impediments.” \nCompanies in the solar energy industry have been examining the challenges around adoption of solar technology. Having identified financing and the daunting upfront costs as major obstacles\, they have developed financing arrangements to enable leasing of equipment in place of large\, initial expenses. \nNYU Law faculty and scholars at the Guarini Center have been exploring issues surrounding the climate and energy strategies of small island states for the past few years. Sarah Herring Sorin Professor of Law Katrina Wyman\, who serves as energy program director at the Law School\, has written extensively about the legal implications facing inhabitants of island states that are shrinking from rising seas and climate change. \nFor Rudyk\, getting small island nations to implement solar energy is a key step to moving the world forward on reducing fossil fuels. In 2013\, he proposed such a “building block” strategy in an essay he co-authored with University Professor Richard Stewart\, John Edward Sexton Professor of Law and faculty director of the Guarini Center\, and Michael Oppenheimer\, a regular visiting professor of law. Rooted in decentralized approaches to climate action\, the strategy leverages non-climate benefits that also coincide with climate benefits. For instance\, microgrids would increase energy security and decrease energy costs for small islands over time—both non-climate benefits. But the side benefit of reducing greenhouse gas emissions is decidedly a climate benefit. \nIf the workshop succeeds in eventually ushering small islands toward solar microgrids\, it would benefit international climate negotiations by putting the pressure on larger nations\, says Rudyk. \n“If a small island can move to 100 percent renewable energy\,” said Rudyk\, “it puts the pressure on other countries to do the same.”
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/cleaner-resilient-power-for-island-states/
LOCATION:NY
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20151026T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20151026T093000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20151026T165526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215154Z
UID:10257-1445848200-1445851800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Book Discussion with Heinrich Böll Foundation President\, Ralf Fuecks
DESCRIPTION:Creator: Anthem Press. All rights reserved.  \nThe Guarini Center is hosting a breakfast with Ralf Fuecks\, President of the Heinrich Boell Foundation\, to discuss his new book Green Growth\, Smart Growth: A New Approach to Economics\, Innovation and the Environment. The event will take place in Snow Dining Room at NYU School of Law from 8:30 – 9:30 am. \nParticipation by invitation only. \nMr. Fuecks’ book tackles the question\, how can we change the patterns of growth away from growing at the expense of ecosystems to a new paradigm based on growth with nature? \nRalf Fücks has been a member of the executive board of the Heinrich Böll Foundation since 1996. The primary focus of his work is on sustainable development and a green economy\, the\nfuture of European integration\, and on foreign policy. Within the Foundation\, he is responsible for the divisions of domestic political education\, Europe and North America as well as German- Israeli-Relations. \n 
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/book-discussion-with-heinrich-boll-foundation-president-ralf-fuecks/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Snow Dining Room\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://guarinicenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Green-Growth.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20151026T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20151026T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20151026T165236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215146Z
UID:10255-1445860800-1445866200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Future of Demand Response in Electricity Markets
DESCRIPTION:Future of Demand Response in Electricity Markets: Implications of EnerNOC v. EPSA\, REV\, and more\nOn October 26th from 6:30 PM – 8:00PM\, the Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law and Latham & Watkins LLP held a panel discussion about potential consequences of EnerNOC v. EPSA\, REV and more for the future of demand response programs. The event was held at NYU School of Law\, Faculty Library (3rd Floor)\, Vanderbilt Hall. \n \n\nSpeakers:\nMichael Gergen (’92)\, a partner in Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office\, is a member of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice as well as the Project Finance Practice. \nMr. Gergen has extensive experience developing practical applications of economics\, finance and regulatory law to assist clients involved in the electric\, natural gas and other network industries in the United States and internationally. Mr. Gergen represents entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, natural gas transportation\, storage and distribution\, electric and natural gas marketing and trading\, and finance\, as well as international governments and financial institutions. Mr. Gergen also assists clients regarding federal and state financing support and incentive programs for clean energy technologies\, products and services. \nMr. Gergen has assisted clients on a wide range of transactional\, controversy\, policy and legislative matters and has represented clients both in commercial negotiations and before various federal and state regulatory agencies\, including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and various state public utility commissions\, and numerous federal and state courts and arbitral bodies. Mr. Gergen also has served as an economist for an investor-owned public utility\, as well as an economic consultant for a state energy commission. \nMr. Gergen is listed as a leading energy attorney in Who’s Who Legal and in Chambers USA\, which describes him as having “developed a positive reputation in the industry as ‘a quick\, clever and creative lawyer.’” He has given a variety of speeches on energy regulatory and policy matters. He is a member of the Federal Energy Bar Association and the American Bar Association. Mr. Gergen was selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 as a recommended attorney in Energy Law. Mr. Gergen is an Adjunct Professor of Law and is a member of the Board of Advisors for the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law. \nKimberly Harriman is General Counsel\, New York State Department of Public Service. Mrs. Harriman has worked in the energy field for 15 years\, both in government and in private practice\, representing the public and clients on a range of energy-related issues.  At the Department she is the General Counsel responsible for a team of 25 attorneys and has primary responsibility for providing legal counsel to the Public Service Commission and the Department regarding regulation of the electric\, gas\, steam\, water\, telecommunications\, and cable industries. \nBefore assuming the General Counsel role\, she was an Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) presiding in major utility rate cases and other proceedings involving regulated utilities.  In addition\, she served as settlement judge in complex multi-party rate case negotiations. \nShe recently worked as Senior Counsel to the Moreland Commission on Utility Storm Preparedness and Response.  Shortly thereafter she was assigned to work on the restructuring of the Long Island Power Authority (LIPA) and worked with a team to develop and implement the Department’s new oversight responsibility with respect to LIPA. \nPrior to becoming an ALJ\, Kim worked as the Assistant Secretary for Energy in Governor Paterson’s office where she assisted in the development of policy on a variety of energy issues affecting New York.  Before joining the Paterson Administration she served as an assistant counsel at the Department of Public Service where she was responsible for major rate case litigation\, siting of electric generating facilities\, prudence proceedings\, development of retail access policy\, and coordination and oversight of federal energy legislation. \nKim has also worked for the law firms of Cohen\, Dax and Koenig and Couch White\, where she represented developers and owners of electric generation and large industrial clients. \nShe received her Bachelor of Arts from Siena College and her law degree from Albany Law School.  She is on the Board of Directors for Women in Communications and Energy\, and she resides in the Albany area with her husband and three children. \n  \nRichard B. Miller (’87)\,  is currently an Assistant General Counsel in the Regulatory Services Department at Con Edison. He has held a variety of positions at Con Edison overseeing legal and policy issues concerning federal energy policy\, demand response\, energy efficiency and electric operations. From 1998-2003\,  he was Senior Vice-President for Energy at the New York City Economic Development Corporation (where he oversaw City energy policy). Prior to 1998\, he was an energy regulatory attorney for Cohen\, Dax & Koenig in Albany\, New York\, and a litigation associate at Cohen\, Weiss and Simon and Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City.  He is a graduate of Amherst College and New York University School of Law.  He has written articles on energy policy that have been published in the Energy Law Journal and Public Utilities Fortnightly.  On a personal note\, he lives in New York City and uses a bicycle as his primary form of transportation\, bicycling approximately 4500 miles annually. \n  \nEmilie Nelson is the Vice President of Market Operations for the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO)\, which operates New York’s high­ voltage transmission system\,manages the state’s wholesale electricity markets\, and conducts comprehensive power system planning. \nMs. Nelson started her career in power generation and joined the NYISO in 2004. During her time at the NYISO\,she has held various roles in market monitoring\, energy market design\, and the operation of wholesale electricity markets. In her current position\, Ms. Nelson is responsible for NYISO’s Installed Capacity Market Operations\, Demand Response Operations\,and Operations Performance and Analysis departments. \nMs. Nelson earned a Bachelors of Science in Mechanical Engineering from Tufts University and a Masters of Business Administration from Pace University. \n  \nJohn P. Reese is Senior Vice President at US Power Generating company\, where he is responsible for regulatory and government affairs\, development\, and environmental compliance for a portfolio currently including 2000 mw of generation in New York City. \nPrior to USPG\, he served as Senior Policy Advisor and Executive Deputy to the New York Public Service Commission working on the creation of NY’s Renewable Portfolio Standard program and previously served as a Vice President of regulatory/market issues for Orion Power/Reliant Energy\, a portfolio of renewable and fossil generation. Mr. Reese also served as Senior Technical Advisor to the US Department of Energy\, Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy from 1994 – 1998. \nMr. Reese is a graduate of Pennsylvania State University and has a Masters Degree in Business Administration from Sage College. \n  \nDavid L. Schwartz is a partner in the Finance Department of Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office. He serves as global Chair of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice\, is a member of the Project Finance Group\, and is Co-chair of the firm’s Global Energy – Power Industry Group. He has extensive experience representing entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, electric and gas marketing and trading\, and gas transportation and distribution. \nMr. Schwartz has been active in the formation of the developing electricity markets in the United States; led transactional and regulatory teams in mergers and acquisitions and divestitures of energy companies and assets; litigated contract\, rate and transmission access disputes; and drafted federal and state energy legislation. He also has extensive experience in negotiating power purchase and sale agreements\, electric transmission agreements\, natural gas transportation agreements\, energy management agreements\, and electric and gas interconnection agreements. \nMr. Schwartz regularly advises clients on energy matters before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)\, various state public utility commissions\, the US Department of Justice (DOJ)\, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)\, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)\, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Department of Energy (DOE). \nMr. Schwartz is consistently recognized as a top energy attorney in Corporate Counsel Magazine\, Best Lawyers in America\, Who’s Who Legal: Energy\, Chambers USA\, Chambers Global\, and The Legal 500 US\, which recently selected him as a “Leading Lawyer” for his transactional energy practice. \nMr. Schwartz is a member of the American Bar Association and has held leadership positions in the Energy Bar Association.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/future-of-demand-response-in-electricity-markets/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Faculty Library\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20151110T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20151110T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20151110T175013Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215138Z
UID:10251-1447178400-1447182000@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:What to Expect on the Road to Paris
DESCRIPTION:“What to Expect on the Road to Paris: A Conversation with Experts at the Center of the UN Conversation”\n \nOn November 10\, 2015 the Guarini Center will host a discussion about the 21st Session of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP21/CMP11). \nBryce Rudyk (LLM ’08) Guarini Center\, Climate Program Director and other experts in the field will provide their outlook regarding the upcoming conference. \nPlease RSVP
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/what-to-expect-on-the-road-to-paris/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Faculty Library\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20151214T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20151214T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20151214T174455Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215131Z
UID:10249-1450085400-1450090800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Lessons from Afar: Innovative Energy Efficiency Policies from Across the Atlantic
DESCRIPTION:On December 14th\, the Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law at NYU School of Law\, Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School and Urban Green Council\, will hold a discussion on\, “Lessons from Afar – Innovative Energy Efficiency Policies from Across the Atlantic.” \nThe event is free\, but space is limited. Please RSVP\, here. \nSpeakers include: \nNico Kienzl\, Director\, Atelier Ten\nCecil Scheib\, Chief Program Officer\, Urban Green Council (moderator)\nMiranda Schreurs\, Director\, Environmental Policy Research Centre and Professor at (FFU) Freie Universität Berlin\nMarcos Vaquer Caballería\, Chair Professor of Administrative Law at Carlos III de Madrid University and Secretary General of the University \nThemes for discussion include European building label schemes\, energy audit regimes and public-private partnerships to catalyze building retrofits and promote energy efficiency entrepreneurs. \nMonday\, December 14\, 2015\, 9:30am – 11:00am \nNYU School of Law\nGreenberg Lounge\, Vanderbilt Hall\n40 Washington Square South\nNew York\, NY 10012 \n1.5 CLE credits are available in the areas of Professional Practice category for both newly admitted and experienced attorneys. Please see CLE reading\, here.\n \nPlease RSVP \nThis event has been made possible through the generous support of the American Friends of Bucerius\, the Consulate General of the Federal Republic of Germany\, Transatlantic Climate Bridge\, and Pérez-Llorca and the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid. \n \nSpeakers include:\nNico Kienzl\, Director\, Atelier Ten \n\nAs a director of Atelier Ten and leader of its global energy analysis practice\, Nico consults on a wide variety of large scale residential\, commercial and institutional buildings\, as well as on masterplan and renovation work in the United States\, Europe\, and the Middle East. \nNico has particular experience with the application of advanced building analysis including facade optimization\, daylight and shading analysis\, and optimization of building systems. Recent work includes the first LEED Platinum condominium high rise in New York City\, the sustainability framework for Columbia’s new Manhattanville Campus\, and the adaptive reuse of the Horno3 blast furnace for the Museum of Steel in Monterrey\, Mexico. Nico teaches building systems integration at Pratt Institute’s Graduate Architecture Program and the core building systems class at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation. \nHe is a LEED Fellow\, and serves as a representative member of the U.S. General Services Administrations (GSA) Green Building Advisory Committee. Nico holds a Dipl. Ing. in Architecture from the Technical University in Munich\, an M.S. in Building Technology from MIT and a Doctor of Design from the Graduate School of Design at Harvard University. \n \nCecil Scheib\, Chief Program Officer\, Urban Green Council \nPreviously\, as Director of Advocacy\, he organized efforts of the Building Resiliency Task Force at the request of the NYC Mayor and Speaker\, and has led Urban Green’s green codes efforts since 2012. With over 20 years sustainability experience\, Cecil was formerly Director of Energy and Sustainability at New York University\, cutting energy use and greenhouse gas emissions by 30% in five years. He wrote NYU’s Climate Action Plan and Energy and Water Design Standards for new construction\, and managed the Sustainable Landscaping and Recycling Shops. Prior to NYU\, he founded Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage\, an off-grid community of 75 residents dedicated to innovating sustainable technology and social systems. Cecil teaches GPRO:O&M through SEIU Local 32 BJ Thomas Shortman Training Fund. He holds a B.S. in Civil Engineering from Stanford University and a Professional Engineer’s license from New York State\, and is a Certified Energy Manager and LEED Accredited Professional. \n \nMiranda Schreurs\, Director\, Environmental Policy Research Centre and Professor at (FFU) Freie Universität Berlin \nPrior to this she was Associate Professor in the Department of Government and Politics\, University of Maryland. Schreurs’ work focuses on comparative environmental politics and policy in Europe\, the US\, and East Asia. She was born and raised in the United States and has also lived for extended periods in Japan and Germany and briefly in the Netherlands. Her PhD is from the University of Michigan and her MA and BA from the University of Washington. She has also spent time researching or teaching at Harvard University\, Utrecht University\, the Freie Universität Berlin\, Keio University\, Chuo University\, and Rikkyo University and has held fellowships from the SSRC-MacArthur \n\nFoundation Program on International Peace and Security Affairs\, the Fulbright Foundation\, and the National Science Foundation/Japan Society for the Promotion of Science.\nIn July 2008 Miranda Schreurs was appointed to the German Advisory Council on the Environment. \nMarcos Vaquer Caballería\, Chair Professor of Administrative Law at Carlos III de Madrid University and Secretary General of the University \nHe has written numerous articles and books on urbanism and housing and has served as Undersecretary of Housing (Ministry of Housing\, Spanish Government)\, CEO of the Public Enterprise of Land Development (2008-2010)\, General Director of Urban Planning and Land Policy (Ministry of Housing\, Spanish Government\, 2004-2008) and as a member of the bureau of the Land Management and Housing Committee of UNECE (2006-2008). \nThe Spanish economic crisis –and in particular\, the associated construction and real estate sector crisis- provoked the exhaustion of the national economic development model and the emergence of a new urban planning regulation based on the “territorial and urban sustainable development” principle. For that purpose\, new and innovative measures for building refurbishment and urban renovation were put in place\, based on energy efficiency and universal accessibility criteria. This new paradigm relies heavily on innovative public-private partnerships\, which will be explained during Professor Vaquer’s presentation.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/lessons-from-afar-innovative-energy-efficiency-policies-from-across-the-atlantic/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Greenberg Lounge\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160126T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160126T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160126T174121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215123Z
UID:10246-1453831200-1453838400@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Energy Private Equity: The New Reality of Low Oil Prices
DESCRIPTION:On January 26\, 2016\, the Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law at NYU School of Law\, held a discussion on\, “Energy Private Equity: The New Reality of Low Oil Prices.” \n\nSpeakers included: \nStephen Coats\, Partner\, Riverstone \nThomas Edelman\, Managing Partner\, White Deer Energy \nRobert Gold (’84)\, Senior Executive\, Ridgewood Energy \nShaia Hosseinzadeh\, Managing Director\, WL Ross & Co. LLC \nRobert Seber\, Partner\, Vinson & Elkins LLP (moderator) \nThis event was made possible through the generous support of Vinson & Elkins LLP. \n \n  \n  \n  \n\n  \nStephen Coats\, Partner\, Riverstone \nMr. Coats is a Partner of Riverstone\, serving as General Counsel. He is based in New York. \nPrior to joining Riverstone in April 2008\, Mr. Coats was a Partner at Vinson & Elkins L.L.P.\, a law firm specializing in the energy sector. While at Vinson & Elkins\, he focused on domestic and cross-border M&A work in the energy sector. Prior to joining Riverstone\, Mr. Coats was outside counsel to Riverstone in several transactions including\, among others\, Niska Gas Storage\, Frontier Drilling\, Red Technology Alliance\, and Phoenix Exploration Company. \nHe received his B.A. in Government from the University of Texas at Austin in 1993 and his J.D. from the University of Texas School of Law in 1997. Mr. Coats is licensed to practice law in the states of New York and Texas. \n  \nThomas Edelman\, Managing Partner\, White Deer Energy \nPrior to forming White Deer\, Mr. Edelman founded and/or managed a series of eight energy companies\, creating significant value for investors over more than a 25-year period. He founded or co-founded Snyder Oil Corporation (now part of Devon Energy Corporation)\, Range Resources (NYSE: RRC) and Patina Oil and Gas (now part of Noble Energy\, Inc.). He also co-founded Bear Paw Energy and Bear Cub Energy\, both midstream companies based in the Rocky Mountains. \nPrior to 1981\, when he left Wall Street to co-found Snyder Oil\, Mr. Edelman was a Vice President in The First Boston Corporation’s (now Credit Suisse) energy group and an associate at Lehman Brothers Kuhn Loeb. \nMr. Edelman is currently a Director of Noble Energy\, Inc. (NYSE: NBL). He currently chairs the Investment Committee and serves as a Trustee of The Hotchkiss School\, serves as Chairman Emeritus of Lenox Hill Neighborhood House\, is a Director of The Wildlife Conservation Society and serves on the Advisory Council of Princeton University’s Department of Politics. He is a former member of the Board of Georgetown University. Mr. Edelman holds an MBA in Finance from Harvard Business School (Baker Scholar) and a BA in Political Economy from Princeton University\, magna cum laude. \n  \nRobert Gold (’84)\, Senior Executive\, Ridgewood Energy \nRobert (“Bob”) L. Gold has been a Senior Executive of Ridgewood Energy since 1987\, the CEO of Ridgewood Capital Corp. since 1998 and has been active in the acquisitions and private equity arena since the mid-1980s. At Ridgewood\, Mr. Gold is part of the senior leadership team in businesses that focus on investments in the energy industry. Bob is the Chairman of the Board for the Institute for Creative Problem Solving\, an educational program for Gifted Math Students and serves on the Board of the NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering. Bob is also a Board member of the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art where he chairs the Finance and Investment Committees. Bob is a co-founder of the Thought Into Action Institute at Colgate University\, a program for college entrepreneurs where Bob teaches entrepreneurship and mentors college entrepreneurs. Prior to joining Ridgewood\, Bob was a corporate attorney at the law firm of Cleary\, Gottlieb\, Steen & Hamilton and a Law Clerk for Federal Judge Charles P. Sifton. Bob earned his B.A. from Colgate University and received his J.D. from New York University Law School. Bob is the father of 5 children. \n  \nShaia Hosseinzadeh\, Managing Director\, WL Ross & Co. LLC \nMr. Hosseinzadeh is a Managing Director of WL Ross & Co. LLC. He leads the firm’s private equity and credit activities in energy and natural resources. Since joining WL Ross in 2010\, Mr. Hosseinzadeh has been involved in the firm’s investments in the natural resources\, power and aerospace sectors. Mr. Hosseinzadeh has over 15 years of experience with private equity\, mergers\, acquisitions and financial restructurings. He has worked on more than 46 transactions with a combined aggregate value of $36 billion. \nPrior to joining WL Ross\, Mr. Hosseinzadeh was employed by Apollo Global Management in New York. Prior to that\, he worked in the Investment Banking and Leveraged Finance Group at Credit Suisse First Boston. His past and present board positions include Air Lease\, EXCO Resources\, Garden Fresh Restaurant\, MW Industries\, Gray Wireline Service and Varel International. Additionally\, he is a member of the Brookings Institute Energy Security Task Force\, and serves as a Sustaining Board Member of Youth Inc. \nMr. Hosseinzadeh earned his MSc in economics and philosophy and his BSc in economics from the London School of Economics. \n  \nRobert Seber\, Partner\, Vinson & Elkins LLP (moderator) \nMr. Seber’s principal areas of practice are private equity and privately negotiated mergers and acquisitions. He has represented numerous investment funds and corporate clients in different sectors of the energy industry and a wide spectrum of other industries\, including technology and financial services. Robert’s extensive private equity experience covers the full transactional cycle of investment funds\, ranging from fund formation to acquisitions\, recapitalizations\, minority investments\, complex equity arrangements\, and exits. He teaches classes on “Oil and Gas Law and Governance” and “Energy Deals” at New York University.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/energy-private-equity-the-new-reality-of-low-oil-prices/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160225T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160225T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160225T173831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215054Z
UID:10243-1456401600-1456407000@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Considering A Career in Energy?
DESCRIPTION:Have you ever considered a career in energy law or policy? Curious about what opportunities might exist in the field? Join us for lunch with two NYU Law alumni who are at the forefront of the profession. \nPlease RSVP here. Students and alumni only \nThursday\, February 25th\, 12 to 1:30PM \nNew York University School of Law \nVanderbilt Hall Room 201 \nSpeakers: \n\nMichael Shenberg ’85\, Partner\, White & Case\nRichard Miller\, ’87\, Director\, Con Edison\n\nSpeaker’s Bios: \nMichael Shenberg \nA recognized leader in his field\, Michael focuses on energy M&A\, capital markets and financing transactions. \nHe has represented financial and strategic investors in numerous deals involving the purchase or sale of energy assets\, including large portfolios\, single-asset deals and joint ventures. Additionally\, Michael advises energy company clients on financings including restructurings\, and corporate and commercial matters. \nRichard B. Miller is Director of the Energy Markets Policy Group at Con Edison where he is responsible for federal energy policy issues\, particularly as they relate to the operation of wholesale markets and the bulk electric transmission system. Previously\, he was an assistant general counsel in the regulatory services department at Con Edison where he worked on legal matters relating to the Con Edison steam system\, renewable power and energy efficiency. From 1998-2003\, he was Senior Vice-President for Energy at the New York City Economic Development Corporation (where he oversaw City energy policy). Prior to 1998\, he was an energy regulatory attorney for Cohen\, Dax & Koenig in Albany\, New York\, and a litigation associate at Cohen\, Weiss and Simon and Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City. \nHe is a graduate of Amherst College and New York University School of Law.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/considering-a-career-in-energy/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Room 201\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160323T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160323T100000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160323T162623Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215048Z
UID:10240-1458721800-1458727200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Nuclear Energy and the Clean Energy Future
DESCRIPTION:On March 23\, 2016\, the Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law at NYU School of Law\, held a discussion on\, “Nuclear Energy and the Clean Energy Future.” \nNuclear energy currently provides approximately 20 percent of America’s electricity—and the majority of the country’s zero-emissions electricity. Yet across the nation\, many nuclear power plants are struggling to stay in business.  These struggles raise questions about how states will implement their ambitious commitments to lower the carbon intensity of their power sectors.  This event will examine the role that nuclear energy should play in helping America’s transition towards a lower-carbon energy system as well as legal and policy options for supporting nuclear energy. New York State’s recently proposed Clean Energy Standard\, which is an innovative response to nuclear energy’s challenges\, will be discussed in detail. \n\nSpeakers include: \nRaj Addepalli\, Managing Director of Utility Rates & Services\, New York Public Service Commission\nEmily Hammond\, Associate Dean for Public Engagement; Professor of Law\, George Washington University Law School\nEmilie Nelson\, Vice President of Market Operations\, New York Independent System Operator\nEduardo Porter\, Reporter\, The New York Times \nMartin Proctor\, SVP\, State Government and Regulatory Affairs and Competitive Market Policy\, Exelon \nWednesday\, March 23rd\, 8:30 – 10:00am. Coffee and registration starting at 8:00am.\nNYU School of Law\nLipton Hall\, D’Agostino Hall\n110 West 3rd Street\nNew York\, NY 10012 \n1.5 credits of CLE are available in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit will be both transitional and non-transitional. 
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/nuclear-energy-and-the-clean-energy-future/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160404T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160404T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160404T162032Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215044Z
UID:10238-1459756800-1459789200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Natural Gas Fired Generation in the US: Looking at the Road Ahead
DESCRIPTION:Sponsored by White and Case LLP \nThe Guarini Center held a discussion with leading industry experts on the outlook for natural gas fired generation in the year ahead. Panelists examined legal\, regulatory and market factors impacting the industry and the role of natural gas in the clean energy economy. \nMonday\, April 4\, 6:30-8:00pm  \nNYU School of Law\nLipton Hall\, D’Agostino Hall\n110 West 3rd Street\nNew York\, NY 10012 \nThe event is off the record and not available to press. \nSpeakers: \n\nScott Beicke\, Managing Director\, Morgan Stanley\nCatherine Callaway\, Executive Vice President\, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer\, Dynegy Inc.\nThad Miller\, Executive Vice President\, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary\, Calpine Corp.\nRobert Mancini (’84)\, Managing Director & Co-Head of CPP-II\, The Carlyle Group\nMichael Shenberg (’85)\, Partner\, White and Case LLP\n\n2 credits of CLE were available in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit was both transitional and non-transitional.  \nSpeakers’ Biographies: \nScott Beicke is a Managing Director in the Investment Banking Division of Morgan Stanley and part of the Firm’s Global Power & Utility Group. He is based in New York and focuses on M&A. Over the last few years\, Scott has worked on announced M&A transactions totally ~40 GW of generation capacity\, including Engie’s 10 GW sale and the spin-merger that created Talen Energy. He joined the Firm in 2004 as an Associate in the Global Capital Markets Division\, serving in roles within the Credit Advisory Group and the Project & Structured Finance Group. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley\, Scott worked as a fixed-income credit analyst at Standard & Poor’s in the Utilities & Energy Group. Scott earned a B.A. in economics from Cornell University and an M.B.A. (with high honors) from the University of Chicago Graduate School of Business. \nCatherine Callaway has held the position of Executive Vice President\, General Counsel and Chief Compliance Officer of Dynegy Inc. since September 2011. Ms. Callaway leads Dynegy’s Legal\, Ethics and Compliance\, NERC and Contract Administration functions. Dynegy generates reliable\, environmentally responsible and affordable energy from its power stations located in the Midwest\, Northeast and West Coast. Dynegy’s fuel-diverse fleet of power stations can generate 13\,000 megawatts – about half from coal and half from natural gas plants – enough to power about 10 million homes. Through its retail electricity providers\, Homefield Energy and Dynegy Energy Services\, Dynegy serves residential\, municipal\, business and industrial customers in Illinois\, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Dynegy will double in size following the consummation of pending transactions with Duke and Energy Capital Partners. Ms. Callaway has been advising energy companies on legal matters for almost 25 years. Prior to joining Dynegy\, she was General Counsel of Reliant Energy and the Gulf Coast Region of NRG Energy and prior to that she held various legal positions with Calpine Corporation\, Reliant Resources\, Coastal Power and Chevron. Ms. Callaway earned her Bachelor of Arts degree from Smith College and her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Texas. \nRobert (“Bob”) Mancini is a Managing Director and Co‐Head of CPP II. Mr. Mancini serves as Chairman of the Board of Cogentrix. Mr. Mancini is based in New York. \nPrior to joining Carlyle\, Mr. Mancini was a Managing Director at Goldman Sachs & Co.\, where he spent nearly twenty years. Most recently Mr. Mancini led the firm’s on‐balance sheet power asset business through Goldman’s wholly owned subsidiary\, Cogentrix Energy LLC\, where he was CEO. Mr. Mancini was instrumental in Goldman’s entry into the power asset business in 2003. Prior to 2003 Mr. Mancini was a member of the legal department where he eventually became the Deputy General Counsel of the Securities Division. Prior to joining Goldman\, Mr. Mancini spent ten years in private practice as a lawyer with Debevoise and Plimpton\, where he established that firm’s derivatives practice. \nMr. Mancini received his J.D. from New York University School of Law in 1984\, where he was a member of the Law Review\, and received his B.A. degree from Binghamton University in 1980\, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. \nThad Miller has been Executive Vice President\, Chief Legal Officer and Secretary of Calpine Corporation\, the largest US independent power generator based on production\, where he has lead the Legal\, Governmental & Regulatory Affairs\, Internal Audit\, Compliance\, Corporate Communications and Insurance groups since 2008.  Prior to that he held various positions\, including Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of Texas Genco LLC\, an IPP;  an energy advisor to TPG\, a private equity firm;  Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer of Orion Power Holdings\, Inc.\, an IPP;  Vice President of Goldman Sachs & Co.; and a partner with two New York law firms. Mr. Miller earned his Bachelor of Science degree from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy and his Juris Doctor degree from St. John’s School of Law. In addition\, Mr. Miller was an officer in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1973-76. \nMichael Shenberg is a partner in the Firm’s Mergers and Acquisitions Practice Group in the New York office. A recognized leader in his field\, he focuses on energy M&A\, capital markets and financing transactions for the Firm. Mr. Shenberg has represented financial and strategic investors in numerous transactions involving the purchase or sale of energy assets\, including large portfolios\, single-asset deals and joint ventures. Additionally\, he advises on financings including restructurings\, and corporate and commercial matters for energy company clients.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/natural-gas-fired-generation-in-the-us-looking-at-the-road-ahead/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160411T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160411T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160411T161849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215040Z
UID:10236-1460399400-1460404800@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Leading the Green Revolution: Danish Perspectives on Building Energy Efficient Cities
DESCRIPTION:A global leader in energy efficiency\, Denmark has roughly halved energy consumption in its buildings over the last 40 years. Denmark’s experience may offer considerable insights for other countries and cities seeking to reduce their carbon footprints. On April 11\, the Guarini Center welcomed Peter Bach\, chief adviser on energy efficiency at the Danish Energy Agency\, Ministry of Climate\, Energy and Building for a conversation on Danish energy efficiency policies. Bach discussed the strategies Denmark has implemented to achieve these impressive results and the obstacles the country encountered along the way. \n\nMonday\, April 11th\, 6:30 – 8:00pm  \nNYU School of Law\nFaculty Library (3rd Floor)\, Vanderbilt Hall\n40 Washington Square South\nNew York\, NY 10012 \nSpeakers:  \n\nPeter Bach\, President\, European Council for an Energy Efficient Economy; Chief Adviser on Energy Efficiency\, Danish Energy Agency\nElta Kolo\, Analyst\, GTM Research\nDanielle Spiegel-Feld\, ’10\, Executive Director\, Guarini Center\nRichard Yancey\, Executive Director\, Building Energy Exchange\, Inc.\n\n1.5 credits of CLE were available in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit was both transitional and non-transitional.  \nThis project\, which is produced in cooperation with the Heinrich Boll Foundation\, is part of the Transatlantic Energy and Climate Network\, a program funded by the European Union. It brings together opinion leaders\, legislators and policy experts from both sides of the Atlantic who are committed to achieving policy change in support of a low carbon economy agenda that creates sustainable jobs\, strengthens local economies and helps to fight climate change. \n \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nSpeakers’ Biographies: \nPeter Bach is the President of the European Council for an Energy Efficient Economy. He is based at the Danish Energy Agency where he works as chief adviser on energy efficiency. He has worked with energy issues and policies during 30 years\, with special focus on energy efficiency over the last 20 years. \nPeter Bach is strongly involved in formulation\, implementation and evaluation of Danish energy efficiency policies and measures. Over the last years he has especially been involved in an overall evaluation of the Danish energy saving activities; preparation of a new action plan on reduction on energy consumption in buildings; developing the rules for the energy utilities energy saving obligations\, and the development of the Danish Energy Strategy 2050\, which shows how Denmark can become independent of fossil fuels. \nPeter Bach has also been strongly involved in international energy efficiency activities\, including negotiations of new directives in EU as a representative for the Danish Government. \nElta Kolo (moderator) is a Grid Edge Analyst at GTM Research working on demand-side management in U.S. electricity markets. Prior to joining GTM\, Elta pursued a joint PhD funded by the European Commission on Sustainable Energy Technologies and Strategies at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. During her PhD she researched demand response policies for the implementation of smart grids\, and has presented her work at both U.S. and European conferences in addition to publishing in international scholarly journals. Elta holds an MSc in Economics and Management of Network Industries from Spain and France and a BA in Economics from Union College (NY). \nRichard C. Yancey\, AIA\, LEED AP\, is the founding Executive Director of the Building Energy Exchange\, Inc. (BEEx)\, an independent\, nonprofit organization that connects the New York real estate and design communities to energy and lighting efficiency solutions through education\, exhibitions\, technology demonstrations\, and research\, at their resource center in downtown Manhattan. \nThe work of BEEx has been featured widely\, including the Wall Street Journal\, Crain’s\, Capital New York\, and NY1; and Richard was named one of the Top Ten New York Energy Entrepreneurs (2015)\, and Top Ten Cleantech Leaders of New York (2013)\, by Breaking Energy. \nPrior to BEEx\, Richard has over twenty years of experience as an practicing architect\, in Seattle and New York\, leading a diverse array of commercial\, institutional\, and residential projects.  He has lectured and published widely\, and sits on the the New York City Mayor’s Climate Action Plan Technical Working Group.  Richard received his Master of Architecture from Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/leading-the-green-revolution-danish-perspectives-on-building-energy-efficient-cities/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Faculty Library\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160613T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160613T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160613T161529Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215038Z
UID:10234-1465808400-1465815600@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Managing the Renewable Grid: A Transatlantic Dialogue
DESCRIPTION:The Guarini Center on Environmental\, Energy and Land Use Law at NYU School of Law\, held a discussion on\, “Managing the Renewable Grid: A Transatlantic Dialogue.” \nIn 2015\, renewable energy resources supplied approximately 33% of Germany’s electricity demand. Yet\, despite the influx of intermittent resources\, grid reliability does not seem to have declined at all. If anything\, it has improved. What regulatory and technical innovations has Germany implemented to accomplish this feat and what challenges has it encountered along the way? The Guarini Center event examined the German experience and the lessons it may hold for New York State. The panel provided an update on initiatives underway in New York to help manage an increasingly renewable power system. \n \n2 credits of CLE were available in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit was both transitional and non-transitional. \n  \nSpecial remarks by:\nAudrey Zibelman\, Chair\, New York Public Service Commission\, ‎New York Department of Public Service \nAudrey Zibelman was confirmed as a Commissioner of the New York State Public Service Commission on June 19\, 2013\, and was named Chair on September 3\, 2013. Her term turns through February 1\, 2018. Ms. Zibelman has extensive experience in the public\, private and notfor-profit energy and electricity sectors. She is a recognized national and international expert in energy policy\, markets and Smart Grid innovation. \nAs PSC Chair\, Ms. Zibelman oversees the regulation and safety of New York’s electric\, gas telephone\, cable\, water and steam utilities. During her tenure\, Ms. Zibelman has been responsible for designing and leading the regulatory and retail market changes of the electric industry under Governor Andrew M. Cuomo’s Reforming the Energy Vision\, New York’s comprehensive plan to modernize and transform the State’s electric industry. \nMs. Zibelman is a Founder and past President and Chief Executive Officer of Viridity Energy\, Inc.\, which she formed after more than 25 years of electric utility industry leadership experience in both the public and private sectors. Previously\, Ms. Zibelman was the Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of PJM\, a Regional Transmission Organization that operates the power grid and wholesale power market serving 14 states throughout the eastern United States. Ms. Zibelman also held legal and executive positions at Xcel Energy\, served as General Counsel to the New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission\, and was Special Assistant Attorney General in the Minnesota Attorney General’s Office. \nDuring her career\, Ms. Zibelman has served on numerous industry-related and non-profit boards\, including\, but not limited to the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic Reliability Councils. She currently is Chair of the New York State Board on Electric Generation Siting and the Environment. She also sits on the State Energy Planning Board; the board of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA)\, the board of the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative Inc. (RGGI)\, the Audit Committee of RGGI\, the New York State Disaster Preparedness Commission\, and the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management Task Force. Ms. Zibelman was appointed to the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC) Board of Directors\, and is a member of NARUC Committee on Electricity. She is a member of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Electricity Advisory Committee; a member of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory’s Future Electric Utility Regulation Advisory Group. She is also a board member of the Advanced Energy Research and Technology Center (AERTC). \nMs. Zibelman received her B.A. from Pennsylvania State University and her J.D. from Hamline University School of Law. Ms. Zibelman\, who resides in Albany\, and her husband\, Phillip Harris\, are the proud parents of four children. \nDr. Annegret Groebel\, Director\, International Coordination\, German Federal Network Agency \nDr. Annegret Groebel has studied economics at the University of Heidelberg and Paris-Dauphine and was a researcher at the University of Mannheim where she also got her doctorate in 1996. \nDr. Groebel has worked for the German Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Post since 1997 (renamed in 2005 to Federal Network Agency for Electricity\, Gas\, Telecommunications\, Post and Railway). \nDr. Groebel has held the post of Head of Section “International Co-ordination” in the German Regulatory Authority for Telecommunications and Post since 2001 and was promoted Head of Department International Relations/Postal Regulation in 2009. She also holds key positions at the Independent Regulators Group (IRG). She is actively involved in the work of the European Regulators Group (ERG) and of the newly created Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications (BEREC). She is responsible for all contacts to other European and non-European regulatory bodies as well as for the contacts with the European Commission\, including CEER\, ACER in the energy field\, ERG-Post and IRG Railways. In March 2012\, she was appointed Vice-President of the Council of European Energy Regulators (CEER) and became the alternate member of the ACER Board of Regulators representing BNetzA at the BoR Plenary meetings. Since August 2013 she is co-chairing the Market Integrity and Transparency Working Groups of ACER and CEER. In November 2013 she was appointed to be a member of the NER Bureau supporting the NER Chair Luigi Carbone (AEEGSI). On 27 April 2016 she was elected Vice Chair of the ACER Board of Regulators. \nShe has expertise in the European regulatory framework for electronic communications and implementation\, as well as the regulatory framework for the internal energy market and is lecturing at universities in Germany\, the FSR in Italy\, and Switzerland. She has advised public authorities on regulatory reform and sector specific regulation. \nOther confirmed speakers include:\n  \nJens Acker\, Counselor\, Energy and Climate Policy\, Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany\nJens Acker\, studied law and joined the regional administration of the Land of Saxony in 2000 taking care of regional funding programs\, later of the relations to the federal state. Since 2007 he is working in the Federal Ministry for Economics and Energy. After Fukushima he joined the energy department where he was concerned with security of supply issues and CHP. Since April 2016 he is posted at the German Embassy in Washington DC where he is responsible for energy and climate issues.\nDavid Edelson\, Manager\, Operations Performance and Analysis\, New York ISO \nMr. Edelson is the Manager of Operations Performance and Analysis for the New York Independent System Operator (NYISO)\, which operates New York’s high­ voltage transmission system\, manages the state’s wholesale electricity markets\, and conducts comprehensive power system planning. \nMr. Edelson started his career in software development and joined the NYISO in 2006. During his time at NYISO\, he has held various roles in product management\, energy market design\, and operations.  He led the projects that put in place a centralized wind forecasting system\, which resulted in NYISO becoming the first ISO/RTO to implement rules and processes to integrate wind resources into its 5-minute economic dispatch.  In his current position\, Mr. Edelson leads several teams responsible for analyzing and validating NYISO’s wholesale Day-Ahead and Real-Time energy market outcomes.  His groups also have responsibility for administering the production wind forecasting program and regional market coordination programs between NYISO and its neighboring Control Areas. \nMr. Edelson earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration/Information Systems from the University at Albany.\n Damian Sciano\, Director\, Distributed Resource Integration at Consolidated Edison \nDamian Sciano is Director of Distributed Resource Integration at Con Edison where he oversees the company’s evolving Distributed System Implementation Plan (DSIP) and Distributed Service Platform (DSP) designed to integrate distributed energy renewables like solar energy into the traditional electric distribution business. \nDamian has over 25 years of utility experience working as a developer of cogeneration projects for Trigen Energy as well as working in Con Edison’s large power plants\, electrical engineering groups\, corporate planning and\, prior to his current position\, as a Senior System Operator responsible for overseeing the operation of the bulk electric system. Damian is a professional engineer and holds a doctorate degree in Electrical Engineering from NYU-Polytechnic School of Engineering and an MBA in Finance from Baruch College. \n  \n \nEleanor Stein\, Visiting Professor at Albany Law School and SUNY Albany; expert for America’s Power Plan; and former project manager for NYS Public Service Commission’s Reforming the Energy Vision initiative \nEleanor Stein served as an Administrative Law Judge at the New York State Public Service Commission from 1994-2014; until November 2015 she was Project Manager for the Commission’s Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) initiative for a more customer-centered\, renewable\, and distributed energy future.  In 2015 she received a Master of Laws degree with distinction in climate change law and policy from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow\, Scotland.  She teaches Law of Climate Change: Domestic & Transnational at Albany Law School and the Power Dialog at the State University of New York.  While at the NY PSC\, she presided over or mediated the Renewable Portfolio Standard (2004)\, the Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard (2007) and the Con Edison Resiliency Collaborative (2013-14).  Her areas of interest include public policy dispute resolution\, mobilizing public participation in energy matters\, and climate justice.  She is on the Board of EcoViva\, a US-based project in solidarity with climate adaptation and sustainability in rural El Salvador.  She is an expert with America’s Power Plan. \nThis event was made possible through the generous support of: \n \n  \n  \n  \n \n  \n 
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/managing-the-renewable-grid-a-transatlantic-dialogue/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20160619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20160620
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160619T161311Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215034Z
UID:10232-1466294400-1466380799@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:The Transatlantic Maritime Emissions Research Network (TRAMEREN) Inaugural Conference
DESCRIPTION:In June of 2016\, the Guarini Center partnered with the Center for Enterprise University at Copenhagen University to convene an international workshop on strategies for controlling emissions from international maritime transport. Event details can be found\, here.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/the-transatlantic-maritime-emissions-research-network-trameren-inaugural-conference/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160811T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160811T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160811T161035Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215030Z
UID:10229-1470940200-1470945600@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Museum of the City of New York-COOL Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned City
DESCRIPTION:“COOL | Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned City”\nThursday\, August 11 at 6:30 pm \nPlease note: This event will take place next door at The New York Academy of Medicine (1216 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street). \nWhile “summer in the city” may conjure up images of sweaty subway cars\, in reality New York’s summers are actually a lot cooler than one might think. More and more electricity is being consumed for air-conditioning\, and the resulting emissions will mean even higher outside temperatures as time goes on. Join author and environmentalist Stan Cox\, named one of The Atlantic‘s “Brave Thinkers” in 2012\, for a talk about the costs and benefits of New Yorkers’ growing reliance on climate control. \nStan Cox is research coordinator at the Land Institute in Salina\, Kansas. He is author of Losing Our Cool: Uncomfortable Truths About Our Air-Conditioned World (and Finding New Ways to Get Through the Summer) (The New Press\, 2010) and three other books on the global ecological crisis. The most recent\, written with Paul Cox\, is How the World Breaks: Life in Catastrophe’s Path\, From the Caribbean to Siberia (The New Press\, 2016). \nA brief discussion and Q&A with Cecil Mark-Corbin\, Deputy Director and Director of Policy Initiatives at WE ACT for Environmental Justice\, to follow. \nThis event is the second program in Fast\, Cool & Convenient: Meeting New Yorkers’ High Demands\, our free three-part talk series developed in collaboration with The New York Academy of Medicine and supported by a grant from the New York Council for the Humanities. \nAdmission is FREE\, pre-register online at mcny.org/programs.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/museum-of-the-city-of-new-york-cool-uncomfortable-truths-about-our-air-conditioned-city/
LOCATION:The New York Academy of Medicine\, 1216 Fifth Avenue at 103rd Street\, New York\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20160922T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20160922T130000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20160922T160736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215022Z
UID:10225-1474545600-1474549200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Voice of (Climate) Change in the Middle East
DESCRIPTION:A Conversation with HE Dr. Thani Al Zeyoudi\, Minister of Climate Change and Environment\, United Arab Emirates\n\n\n\nThursday\, September 22\, 12:00-1:00pm \nNYU School of Law\nPollack Colloquium Room\, Furman Hall\n245 Sullivan Street\nNew York\, NY 10012\nDr. Thani Al Zeyoudi was appointed UAE Minister of Climate Change and Environment in February 2016. This portfolio is the first in the region\, and will be responsible for leading the UAE’s national and international action on climate change. He is\, as well\, the UAE’s Permanent Representative to the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA)\, the first international organization dedicated to renewable energy. \nDuring this discussion\, Dr. Al Zeyoudi will offer perspectives on the UAE’s approach to climate action\, which is anchored in an ambitious agenda to diversify from away from oil and places climate change issues at the centre of foreign diplomacy. \nThis event is hosted in collaboration with the NYU Abu Dhabi Institute.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/voice-of-climate-change-in-the-middle-east/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Furman Hall\, Lester Pollack Colloquium\, 245 Sullivan Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://guarinicenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Dr.-Thani-Al-Zeyoudi-Photo-full-e1473970699736.jpeg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161019T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161019T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20161019T160339Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215017Z
UID:10222-1476901800-1476907200@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Offshore Wind: Charting the Path for the United States
DESCRIPTION:1.5 CLE credits in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit is both transitional and non-transitional.  \nThis event was produced in collaboration with Chadbourne & Parke LLP \nOn October 19\, the Guarini Center held a discussion with leading industry and government experts on the outlook for wind development off the coast of New York State and the broader US. Topics addressed include federal and state incentives for offshore development\,  New York’s offshore wind blueprint\, and a look back at the factors that contributed to the development of the Block Island Windfarm. \nSpeakers: \n\nChaim Wachsberger\, Partner\, Chadbourne & Parke LLP (moderator)\nDavid Hang\, Senior Vice President of D. E. Shaw & Co.\, L.P.\nJohn Rhodes\, President and CEO\, New York State Energy Research and Development Authority\nScott Weiner\, Deputy for Markets and Innovation\, New York State Department of Public Service\nBill White\, Senior Director of Offshore Wind Sector Development\, Massachusetts Clean Energy Center\nFrederick Zalcman\, Head of Market Development & Government Affairs at DONG Energy\n\nBios: \n \nChaim Wachsberger represents sponsors\, equity investors\, and financing sources in connection with energy\, transportation and other industrial and infrastructure projects in the United States and abroad. Mr. Wachsberger’s work includes acquisitions and divestitures\, portfolio financings\, and the development and project financing of major projects. These projects often involve complex structures\, multilateral or export credit agency participation\, and political risk insurance products. Mr. Wachsberger headed the Firm’s Project Finance Group from 1997 until 2010 and served on the Firm’s Management Committee from 1992 to 2013. He is an adjunct professor at NYU Law School co-teaching a course on US energy transactions. \nMr. Wachsberger has been ranked in “Band 1” for “Projects” in 2009-2012 and “Band 2” in 2016 in Chambers Global. In the United States\, he has been listed for project finance in Chambers USA 2001-2006\, 2008-2012 and 2016\, The Legal 500 US 2010\, 2012\, 2015\, IFLR1000 2012\, Who’s Who Legal 2012\, The Best Lawyers in America 2006-2008 and 2010-2013\, and New York Super Lawyers 2006-2012. \nMr. Wachsberger is a member of the State of New York Bar Association\, State of New Jersey Bar Association\, and American Bar Association (Section on Corporation\, Banking and Business Law). He is an adjunct professor at the NYU School of Law. \nMr. Wachsberger attended City University of New York\, Queens College\, B.A.\, 1973 and Columbia Law School\, J.D.\, 1976. \nDavid Hang is a senior vice president of D. E. Shaw & Co.\, L.P. and a member of the D. E. Shaw group’s U.S. growth and buyout private equity unit. Prior to joining the D. E. Shaw group in 2007\, Mr. Hang was a principal in the private equity firm CCMP Capital Advisors\, LLC and its predecessor\, J.P. Morgan Partners\, LLC. He is a member of the board of managers of Deepwater Wind\, LLC and also serves as its chief financial officer. In addition\, Mr. Hang serves on the boards of directors of Green Rock Energy\, L.L.C. and the parent company of Dorado Beach Resort. He previously was a member of the boards of directors of Brand Energy & Infrastructure Services\, Inc. and Vetco International Ltd. Mr. Hang earned a B.S. in commerce from the McIntire School of Commerce at the University of Virginia\, where he was designated an Echols Scholar for academic distinction. \nJohn Rhodes was appointed President and Chief Executive Officer of the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) on September 16\, 2013.\nMr. Rhodes brings more than 30 years of experience in business with a focus on the financial and energy industries having lived and worked internationally\, including India\, Germany\, Brazil\, and Argentina. \nPrior to his appointment\, Mr. Rhodes served as the Director for the Center for Market Innovation at the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC)\, an international environmental advocacy organization.  The Center works to channel private capital towards environmentally beneficial investments with a focus on energy efficiency\, renewable energy\, green infrastructure\, and sustainable food and agriculture. \nBefore joining NRDC\, Mr. Rhodes spent three years acting as Chief Operating Officer at Good Energies\, a leading investment firm focused on renewable energy and energy efficiency.  As a member of the senior management team\, he oversaw operations\, strategy and portfolio companies. \nAdditionally\, Mr. Rhodes was a partner at Booz Allen Hamilton where he provided strategic consulting for clients across technology–intensive industries including energy\, aerospace\, chemicals and pharmaceuticals.  He has also served as a Trader and General Manager at Metallgesellschaft\, a German mining\, metals and engineering firm. \nHe also serves on boards of several non-profit organizations\, including the Alliance to Save Energy\, Urban Green Council\, New York Institute for Special Education\, American Federation for Aging Research and Cornerstone Literacy. He previously served as a Trustee on the Citizens Budget Commission of New York and as an Advisory Council member for the Metropolitan Policy Program at the Brookings Institution. \nMr. Rhodes is a graduate of Princeton University and the Yale School of Management. \nScott Weiner is as the Deputy for Markets and Innovation at the New York State Department of Public Service\, which has a broad mandate to ensure access to safe\, reliable utility service at just and reasonable rates. In this role\, Scott is responsible for leading the Department’s staff activities in support of New York’s Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) initiative. Scott joined the Department after a distinguished career as an executive\, educator and public official. \nScott has also served as a senior executive in a number of private and public corporations including as President of Ballard Generation Systems\, Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Petra Solar\, Senior Vice President for Market Structure and  Regulatory Affairs at Sithe Energies and Vice President for Corporate Development at General Public Utilities. Mr. Weiner has previously served on the board of many industry associations and non-governmental organizations including as Chair of the Business Council for Sustainable Energy\, the Solar Energy Industries Association\, the Electric Power Supply Association\, the National Hydrogen Association and the Center for Sustainable Development in the Americas. \nScott has served in a number of senior positions in New Jersey government. These include appointments as the Executive Director of the N.J. Election Law Enforcement Commission\, President of the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities\, Commissioner of the\nNew Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and Energy\, Chief Counsel to former New Jersey Governor Jim Florio and as a Special Assistant Attorney General and Special Counsel to former New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine. He also served as a Borough Councilman and as President of the Borough Council in Fort Lee\, NJ. \nScott is the founding Director of the Center for Energy\, Economic and Environmental Policy at Rutgers University and has served as a Senior Policy Fellow and Faculty Fellow at the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy.\n \nBill White serves as Senior Director\, Offshore Wind Sector Development at the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center (MassCEC).  Bill leads MassCEC’s efforts on the federal leasing process for offshore wind development\, as well as coordinated transmission planning\, environmental surveys\, met-ocean data collection\, and stakeholder engagement efforts related to offshore wind.  Additionally\, Bill led the construction of the Marine Commerce Terminal in New Bedford\, a first-in-the-nation facility designed for the staging\, assembly\, and deployment of offshore wind projects.  Previously\, Bill served as a Special Assistant to the President in the Clinton White House and worked at the U.S. Department of State.  He is a graduate of Boston College’s School of Management (B.S.) and Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government (MPA). \n Frederick Zalcman is DONG Energy Wind Power’s Head of Market Development and Government Affairs for the US. His work focuses primarily on creating robust\, self-sustaining markets for offshore wind energy. \nZalcman has nearly 30 years of experience in the energy field as an attorney and policy analyst. His career has centered on promoting market structures and regulatory policies that are supportive of energy efficiency\, renewable resources and clean distributed generation. Prior to joining DONG Energy\, Zalcman was Managing Director of External Affairs for the Eastern U.S. for SunEdison\, the world’s largest renewable energy developer\, where he spearheaded legislative and regulatory efforts resulting in the exponential growth of distributed solar across multiple state markets.  Previously\, Zalcman was the Executive Director of the Pace Law School Energy and Climate Center\, one of the nation’s preeminent sustainable energy research\, education and advocacy groups. \nZalcman has served on a number of gubernatorial\, legislative and agency advisory boards providing guidance and counsel on clean energy policy and program development. He has also taught energy and natural resources law\, and has written and lectured extensively on energy and environmental matters. The Association of Energy Engineers named him the Northeast Region’s Renewable Energy Innovator of 2009. \nZalcman received a B.A in History from Washington University in St. Louis\, and a joint degree in Law and Public Administration from Indiana University.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/offshore-wind-charting-the-path-for-the-united-states/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, D’Agostino Hall\, Lipton Hall\, 108 West 3rd Street\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20161027
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20161029
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20161027T160128Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215010Z
UID:10220-1477526400-1477699199@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:Sustainable Energy Solutions for Remote Populations in Latin America
DESCRIPTION:Led by Bryce Rudyk and Danielle Spiegel-Feld\, the Guarini Center convened a major international conference to explore barriers and opportunities for deploying renewable energy powered microgrids in Latin America. The workshop drew participants from the international development community\, including the World Bank\, the International Finance Corporation\, Inter-American Development Bank\, Overseas Private Investment Corporation\, and the United Arab Emirates’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs; the governments of Argentina\, Chile\, Colombia\, Guyana\, Mexico\, Panama\, and Uruguay; the United Nations; NGOs\, academics; and the renewable energy industry. The workshop\, which was hosted in collaboration with Solar City\, follows an earlier conference that examined the potential for microgrid deployment in Small Island Developing States.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/sustainable-energy-solutions-for-remote-populations-in-latin-america/
LOCATION:NY
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20161114T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20161114T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T152318
CREATED:20161114T165842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221201T215006Z
UID:10217-1479148200-1479153600@guarinicenter.org
SUMMARY:State Electricity Regulation in the Shadow of Hughes and EPSA
DESCRIPTION:1.5 CLE credits in the Areas of Professional Practice category. The credit was both transitional and non-transitional.  \nLast year\, the Supreme Court handed down two major opinions – Electric Power Supply Association v. FERC\, and Hughes v. Talen Energy Marketing – that provided new guidance on the contours of Federal Power Act and the boundaries of state versus federal authority over the electricity sector. On November 14th\, the Guarini Center held a discussion with leading experts to examine the implications of these decisions for innovative state electricity policies such as New York’s Clean Energy Standard and REV. \nThis event was produced in collaboration with Latham & Watkins LLP. \nSpeakers: \n\nMichael Gergen (’92)\, Partner\, Latham & Watkins LLP\nRichard B. Miller (’87)\, Assistant General Counsel in the Regulatory Services Department\, Con Edison\nDavid L. Schwartz\, Partner\, Latham & Watkins LLP\nAbraham Silverman\, Chief Regulatory Counsel for NRG Energy\, Inc.\nEleanor Stein\, Adjunct Professor\, Albany Law School; Expert\, America’s Power Plan\n\n \nMichael Gergen a partner in Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office\, is a member of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice as well as the Project Finance Practice. \nMr. Gergen has extensive experience developing practical applications of economics\, finance and regulatory law to assist clients involved in the electric\, natural gas and other network industries in the United States and internationally. Mr. Gergen represents entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, natural gas transportation\, storage and distribution\, electric and natural gas marketing and trading\, and finance\, as well as international governments and financial institutions. Mr. Gergen also assists clients regarding federal and state financing support and incentive programs for clean energy technologies\, products and services. \nMr. Gergen has assisted clients on a wide range of transactional\, controversy\, policy and legislative matters and has represented clients both in commercial negotiations and before various federal and state regulatory agencies\, including the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and various state public utility commissions\, and numerous federal and state courts and arbitral bodies. Mr. Gergen also has served as an economist for an investor-owned public utility\, as well as an economic consultant for a state energy commission. \nMr. Gergen is listed as a leading energy attorney in Who’s Who Legal and in Chambers USA\, which describes him as having “developed a positive reputation in the industry as ‘a quick\, clever and creative lawyer.’” He has given a variety of speeches on energy regulatory and policy matters. He is a member of the Federal Energy Bar Association and the American Bar Association. Mr. Gergen was selected for inclusion in The Best Lawyers in America 2012 as a recommended attorney in Energy Law. Mr. Gergen is an Adjunct Professor of Law and is a member of the Board of Advisors for the Institute for Policy Integrity at the New York University School of Law. \n \nRichard Miller has held a variety of positions at Con Edison since 1998 overseeing legal and policy issues concerning wholesale electric markets\, demand response\, energy efficiency and electric and gas operations.  He is currently an assistant general counsel in the regulatory services department.  From 1998-2003\,  he was Senior Vice-President for Energy at the New York City Economic Development Corporation (where he oversaw City energy policy). Prior to 1998\, he was an energy regulatory attorney for Cohen and Dax in Albany\, New York\, and a litigation associate at Sullivan & Cromwell in New York City.  He has written articles on law and energy policy that have been published in the Energy Law Journal and Public Utilities Fortnightly and is a former President of Northeast Energy Bar Association.  He is a graduate of Amherst College and New York University School of Law. On a personal note\, he lives in New York City and uses a bicycle as his primary form of transportation\, bicycling approximately 5000 miles annually. \n \nDavid Schwartz is a partner in the Finance Department of Latham & Watkins LLP’s Washington\, D.C. office. He serves as global Chair of the Energy Regulatory and Markets Practice\, is a member of the Project Finance Group\, and is Co-chair of the firm’s Global Energy – Power Industry Group. He has extensive experience representing entities involved in electric generation\, transmission and distribution\, electric and gas marketing and trading\, and gas transportation and distribution. \nMr. Schwartz has been active in the formation of the developing electricity markets in the United States; led transactional and regulatory teams in mergers and acquisitions and divestitures of energy companies and assets; litigated contract\, rate and transmission access disputes; and drafted federal and state energy legislation. He also has extensive experience in negotiating power purchase and sale agreements\, electric transmission agreements\, natural gas transportation agreements\, energy management agreements\, and electric and gas interconnection agreements. \nMr. Schwartz regularly advises clients on energy matters before the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)\, various state public utility commissions\, the US Department of Justice (DOJ)\, the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)\, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)\, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and the Department of Energy (DOE). \nMr. Schwartz is consistently recognized as a top energy attorney in Corporate Counsel Magazine\, Best Lawyers in America\, Who’s Who Legal: Energy\, Chambers USA\, Chambers Global\, and The Legal 500 US\, which recently selected him as a “Leading Lawyer” for his transactional energy practice. \nMr. Schwartz is a member of the American Bar Association and has held leadership positions in the Energy Bar Association. \nAbraham Silverman\, heads the regulatory affairs group and is chief regulatory counsel for NRG Energy\, Inc.\, an independent power producer with over 50 GW of generation nationwide\, and one of the largest solar and wind portfolios in the word. NRG\, through its various retail affiliates\, serves over 3 million retail customers in 16 states. Abe counsels the company on regulatory strategy and compliance issues\, and does extensive wholesale and retail market design work in each of the organized markets\, as well as in the non-organized markets. Prior to joining NRG in 2008\, Abe served at the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s Office of General Counsel for over three years\, and was an associate at the law firm of Perkins Coie\, based in Washington\, DC. Abe graduated from the University of Maryland with a B.S. in Geology and a B.A. in English\, and then received his Juris Doctor from The George Washington University School of Law. \n \nEleanor Stein is a former Administrator Law Judge with the New York Public Service Commission\, and former project manager of its Reforming the Energy Vision initiative. She teaches Law of Climate Change: Domestic & Transnational at Albany Law School and the University at Albany and is now an expert with America’s Power Plan. She served as an Administrative Law Judge at the New York State Public Service Commission from 1994-2014; until November 2015 she was Project Manager for the Commission’s Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) initiative for a more customer-centered\, renewable\, and distributed energy future.  In 2015 she received a Master of Laws degree with distinction in climate change law and policy from the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow.  She teaches Law of Climate Change: Domestic & Transnational at Albany Law School and the Power Dialog at the University at Albany.  While at the NY PSC\, she presided over or mediated the Renewable Portfolio Standard (2004)\, the Energy Efficiency Portfolio Standard (2007) and the Con Edison Resiliency Collaborative (2013-14).  Her areas of interest include public policy dispute resolution\, mobilizing public participation in energy matters\, and climate justice.  She is on the Board of EcoViva\, a US-based project in solidarity with climate adaptation and sustainability in rural El Salvador.  She is an expert with America’s Power Plan.
URL:https://guarinicenter.org/event/state-electricity-regulation-in-the-shadow-of-hughes-and-epsa/
LOCATION:NYU School of Law\, Vanderbilt Hall\, Faculty Library\, 40 Washington Square South\, New York\, NY\, 10012\, United States
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR