Obama names energy team
President-elect Barack Obama, formally unveiling his energy and environment team, vowed this afternoon to end the nation's addiction to foreign oil, to make significant strides on climate change, and to create a new alternative energy economy.
He said that the choices the country makes in the next few years will determine kind of country and world will be left to today's children.
Obama acknowledged that politicians have long promised energy independence, only to lose attention once gas prices fall again.
"This time we cannot fail," he said. "This will be a leading priority of my administration."
His team includes Nobel laureate Steven Chu as energy secretary, New Jersey environmental official Lisa Jackson as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, Los Angeles deputy mayor Nancy Sutley as head of the White House Council on Environmental Quality, and former EPA chief Carol Browner to a new post as coordinator of energy and climate policy. Obama said he will name his Interior Secretary later this week.
Obama said he spoke to Senator John F. Kerry, who attended a conference in Poland on global warming, and said any solution must be international.
"In the 21st century, we know that the future of our economy and national security is inextricably linked to one challenge: energy," Obama said. "The team that I have assembled here today is uniquely suited to meet the great challenges of this defining moment. They are leading experts and accomplished managers, and they are ready to reform government and help transform our economy so that our people are more prosperous, our nation is more secure, and our planet is protected. I look forward to working with them in the years ahead.”
Their resumes, provided by Obama's transition office, are below:
Dr. Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy
Dr. Chu is director of Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, and professor of physics and molecular and cellular biology at University of California, Berkeley. Winner of the Nobel Prize for physics in 1997, Dr. Chu served on the technical staff at AT&T Bell Labs (1978 –1987) and was a professor in the Physics and Applied Physics Departments at Stanford University (1987 – 2004). One of the world’s most distinguished scientists, Dr. Chu commands deep respect from his peers, deftly manages a complex governmental organization, and has a keen sense of public service. He successfully applied the techniques he developed in atomic physics to molecular biology, and since 2004, motivated by his deep interest in climate change, he has transformed the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab into a broad and innovative research program on energy technologies. He has a BS in physics from the University of Rochester and his Ph.D from UC-Berkeley.
Lisa Jackson, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator
Jackson became the head of New Jersey’s Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) in 2006. She had previously served as DEP Deputy Commissioner before being appointed to the post by Gov. Corzine, and currently serves as Corzine’s chief of staff. Her past experience includes management responsibilities at the Environmental Protection Agency’s regional office in New York for the Superfund program, the federal program regulating hazardous waste cleanup projects; for enforcement programs at both EPA and DEP; and for New Jersey’s Land Use Management Program. She is a professional engineer, having received her Master's Degree in chemical engineering from Princeton University and her undergraduate degree from Tulane University in her hometown of New Orleans. During her tenure at NJDEP, she helped develop the Northeastern states Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), serving as Vice President of its Executive Board. She has also focused on water issues, including expanding protections for surface waters that serve as sources of drinking water and habitat for endangered species.
Nancy Sutley, Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality
Sutley currently serves as the Deputy Mayor for Energy and Environment for the City of Los Angeles, and is also Mayor Villaraigosa’s appointment to the Board of Directors for the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California. She has previously served on the California State Water Resources Control Board, as Energy Advisor to Governor Davis and as the Deputy Secretary for Policy and Intergovernmental Relations within the California Environmental Protection Agency. During the Clinton administration, Sutley was a Senior Policy Advisor to the Regional Administrator for EPA, Region 9 in San Francisco and a Special Assistant to the Administrator at the Federal EPA in Washington, DC. Sutley has also served as the Policy Director for the National Independent Energy Producers and as an Industry Economist for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. She received her Master's in Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and an undergraduate degree from Cornell University.
Carol Browner, Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change
Browner is Principal of The Albright Group LLC, where she provides strategic counsel in the critical areas of environmental protection, climate change, and energy conservation and security. Prior to her current position, she served as Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, a Cabinet-level position she held for eight years. Browner developed partnerships with business leaders, community advocates, and all levels of government. She is widely known for championing common sense, cost-effective solutions to pressing environmental and public health challenges. At EPA, she brought the climate change issue to the forefront and established climate change as an important environmental issue requiring action. Before EPA, Browner was Secretary of the State of Florida’s Department of Environmental Regulation. She also served as Legislative Director for then United States Senator Al Gore.
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This is great news, now maybe the president elect can do something about the senator from Minnesota who is holding up the cape wind project here in this state and preventing us from becoming less dependent on fossil fuel.
Oh sure, you let this person sell some crappy book, but you won't post my story!
This energy team has inspired me to pick up the new Pontiac G8 GT..
I see president-elect Obama's recognition very siginificant that politicians have long promised energy independence only to lose attention once gas prices fall again, and his resolution to focus on the energy issue.