American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness · American Energy and Manufacturing...

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1 Program American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness Summit December 12, 2013 Ronald Reagan International Trade Center 1300 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington, DC 20004

Transcript of American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness · American Energy and Manufacturing...

Page 1: American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness · American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness (AEMC) Summit. This inaugural AEMC Summit convenes leaders from across America’s

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Program

American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness Summit

December 12, 2013Ronald Reagan International Trade Center1300 Pennsylvania Ave NW Washington, DC 20004

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Media PartnerMedia support for this event is provided by Breaking Energy. Breaking Energy provides news, analysis, reference materials and discussions about the day’s energy market trends.

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Contents

Welcome Letter 4

Agenda 6

Exhibits 10

About the Council on Competitiveness 14

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Network: Ronald Reagan BuildingUsername: CouncilPassword: 25150

@CompeteNow #2013AEMCSummit

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The Council on Competitiveness and the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) welcome you to the inaugural American Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness (AEMC) Summit.

This inaugural AEMC Summit convenes leaders from across America’s vibrant and diverse industrial, academic, national laboratory, labor and government communities to address the most critical challenges and promising opportunities to bolster U.S. competitiveness by strengthening the U.S. energy and manufacturing ecosystems.

And many of these key stakeholders—at all levels, from local to regional to national—have been engaged this year in a robust conversation and dialogue series to distill the salient challenges and opportunities facing America’s manufacturing and energy sectors, and uncover concrete actions and policy solutions to:

• Increase U.S. competitiveness in the production of next–generation, clean energy products by strategically investing in technologies that leverage American competitive advantages and overcome competitive disadvantages.

• Increase U.S. manufacturing competitiveness across the board by increasing energy productivity and strategically investing in technologies and practices that enable U.S. manufacturers to increase their competitiveness through energy efficiency, combined heat and power, and low-cost domestic energy sources.

These goals are a reflection of a critical inflection point in America’s history. The natural gas revolution, as part of a broader, deeper, and more diverse energy portfolio, has created unprecedented energy strength, abundance, and independence—lowering energy costs, boosting the long-term prospects for economic competitiveness, reducing dependence on foreign sources of energy, and offering a bridge to a cleaner and distinctly American energy

Welcome

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future. Concurrently, the nation’s leadership in innovation and research is unparalleled, and America’s strong entrepreneurship and investment ecosystem turbocharges limitless opportunities.

We find ourselves at a unique moment in our energy history with a wide array of clean energy technologies—solar modules, wind turbine blades, plug-in electric vehicle batteries and advanced biofuels, to name a few—now within five to ten years of being directly cost competitive without subsidies.

But America will only capture the promise of this point in time, and the tools and resources available, if the country takes bold, decisive and collective action. Today’s opportunity is to optimize how all of America’s stakeholders in a more energy and manufacturing competitive economy can come together to forge a new era of U.S. technology leadership, create jobs and lead the way to a sustainable, secure and prosperous future.

The inaugural AEMC Summit is the nation’s newest launch pad for common action toward these common goals. With our outstanding lineup of speakers, live demonstrations, and an action-oriented group of more than 600 participants, we are poised for a successful launch of a significant effort. We look forward to working with you in the years to come.

Ms. Deborah L. Wince-Smith President & CEO Council on Competitiveness

Dr. David T. Danielson Assistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy U.S. Department of Energy

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Agenda

Welcome to the AEMC Summit at the Ronald Reagan International Trade Center. Sessions today will take place in the Auditorium Lobby, Auditorium and Atrium.

Department of Energy (DOE) Side SessionsAs part of the overall Summit, these Side Sessions will offer participants a chance to interact directly with DOE program directors. These special sessions will give participants opportunities to learn about manufacturing activities in technology programs, upcoming R&D areas, the latest director understandings of manufacturing competitiveness, and information on recently awarded grants. Please note that space for the DOE Side Sessions is limited and seating will be based on a first-come, first-serve basis.

MORNING

7:00 Registration and Networking BreakfastLocation: Auditorium Lobby

8:00 The American Advantage—Energy & Manufacturing

Location: Auditorium

This session will describe efforts underway to increase U.S. competitiveness in creating clean energy products and increasing U.S. manufacturing competitiveness by increasing energy productivity.

The Honorable Deborah L. Wince-SmithPresident & CEOCouncil on Competitiveness

The Honorable Ernest J. MonizSecretary of EnergyU.S. Department of Energy

The Honorable Norman R. AugustineFormer Chairman and Chief Executive OfficerLockheed Martin Corporation

8:45 Clean Energy Manufacturing InitiativeLocation: Auditorium

The Honorable David T. DanielsonAssistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable EnergyU.S. Department of Energy

9:00 How to Compete in the Global EconomyLocation: Auditorium

This session will explore how companies remain competitive in an economy characterized by transition, turbulence and transformation. Panel leaders will reflect on the strategic investments, partnerships, and vision needed to compete in the global economy. This session will provide perspective on the leadership of individual organizations, and elucidate strengths and weaknesses in America’s ability to support and cultivate world-class innovators.

Framing Questions

How do U.S. companies stay ahead of their domestic and foreign competitors?

How well equipped is the Unites States to attract investments from companies that can locate business units across the globe?

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Moderator

The Honorable Patrick D. GallagherActing Deputy Secretary of Commerce; and DirectorNational Institute of Standards and Technology

Speakers

Mr. Ramanath RamakrishnanExecutive Vice President and Chief Technology OfficerEaton Corporation

Mr. Tom Werner Chief Executive OfficerSunPower Corporation

9:45 A View from the HillLocation: Auditorium

In this panel, the group will hear congressional leadership reflecting on the changing energy landscape, the recent rebound in the U.S. manufacturing sector, and what this means for their home states.

Keynote Speakers

The Honorable Marcia C. KapturU.S. House of Representatives

The Honorable Randall M. Hultgren (invited)U.S. House of Representatives

10:05 Coffee and Networking BreakLocation: Auditorium Lobby

10:30 A View from the White House

The Honorable Deborah L Wince-SmithPresident & CEOCouncil on Competitiveness

The Honorable Gene B. SperlingDirector of the National Economic Council andAssistant to the President for Economic PolicyThe White House

11:00 Carpe Manufacturing! Leveraging America’s Advantages for U.S. Energy and Manufacturing Competitiveness

Location: Auditorium

With low energy prices, rising foreign labor costs, strong intellectual property protection, and a favorable exchange rate, the United States is, by many accounts, poised for a resurgence in manufacturing. This session brings together the actors in the innovation ecosystem—private industry, academia, the national laboratories, and the government—to explore the following key questions.

Framing Questions

How can the United States leverage its world-class research and development institutions, skilled labor-force, the shale gas boom, and robust entrepreneurial and investment ethos to unleash the intrinsic potential of this distinctive time?

What government policies, programs, and initiatives are central to unlocking this resurgence?

Moderator

Dr. James H. StockMemberCouncil of Economic Advisers

Speakers

Ms. Amy EricsonU.S. Country PresidentAlstom Corporation

Dr. Lloyd JacobsPresidentUniversity of Toledo

Mr. Jeff WilcoxVice President, EngineeringLockheed Martin Corporation

Ms. Carol WilliamsExecutive Vice PresidentManufacturing & Engineering, Supply Chain and Environmental, Health & Safety OperationsThe Dow Chemical Company

Mr. Roger WoodPresident and Chief Executive OfficerDana Holding Corporation

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AFTERNOON

12:00 LunchLocation: Main Atrium

12:45 Lunch KeynoteLocation: Main Atrium

Introduction

The Honorable Barton J. GordonPartnerK&L Gates

Keynote Speaker

The Honorable Steny H. HoyerU.S. House of Representatives

1:15 Coffee and Exhibits ShowcaseLocation: Auditorium Lobby

1:30 Technologies Driving the United States to Our Energy Future

Location: Auditorium

During the last several years, global investment in the clean energy sector has risen nearly fivefold, growing from $54 billion in 2004 to $269 billion worldwide in 2012. The United States faces a stark choice: the energy technologies of the future can be developed and manufactured in America for export around the world, or we can cede global leadership and import those technologies. The panel brings together leaders that create, enable, or deploy the technologies that drive U.S. competitiveness in the production of clean energy products and/or increase energy productivity across the U.S. industrial base.

Framing Questions

What are the technologies that the United States needs to focus on to ensure leadership in the clean energy sector?

How do advanced manufacturing technologies drive energy efficiency throughout the U.S. industrial base?

Moderator

The Honorable Alexander A. “Andy” KarsnerChief Executive OfficerManifest Energy

Speakers

Dr. Sujeet ChandSenior Vice President and Chief Technology OfficerRockwell Automation

Mr. Peter DavidsonExecutive DirectorLoan Program OfficeU.S. Department of Energy

Dr. Robert EasterPresidentUniversity of Illinois

Dr. Eric IsaacsDirectorArgonne National Laboratory

Mr. Michael MansuettiPresidentRobert Bosch LLC

2:15 Platforms for Innovation and Manufacturing Competitiveness—the Roles of the National Laboratories

Location: Auditorium

National laboratories are recognized as being some of the deepest repositories of technological expertise and one of the greatest assets in the national innovation ecosystem. The panel brings together industry and national laboratory leaders to discuss how national laboratories can utilize their assets to encourage widespread economic development in the United States.

Framing Questions

Through the AEMC Partnership Dialogues in 2013, we have discussed the role of national laboratories as epicenters of excellence and as sources of knowledge spillover. What are the laboratories doing to promote knowledge spillover and therefore foster economic growth?

How do laboratories balance their core mission of national security and scientific research while responding to the calls from the government and the private sector to help drive economic growth?

Moderator

The Honorable David T. DanielsonAssistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable EnergyU.S. Department of Energy

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Speakers

Dr. William GoldsteinDeputy Director for Science & TechnologyLawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Dr. Thomas MasonDirectorOak Ridge National Laboratory

Mr. Stephen C. NoletPrincipal Engineer, andSenior Director of Innovation & TechnologyTPI Composites, Inc.

Dr. Jud VirdenAssociate Laboratory DirectorEnergy and Environment DirectoratePacific Northwest National Laboratory

3:15 Leadership Reflections: Energy & Manufacturing in the Innovation Economy

Location: Auditorium

Over the last 30 years, competitive pressures created by new and growing markets as well as technological progress have fundamentally changed the structure of most American companies. Many vertically integrated industrial giants shed business functions not defined as their core competency. Manufacturing tops the list of functions moved out from within four walls of a company to foreign or domestic subcontractors.

Framing Questions

What are the consequences of this tremendous structural shift in the U.S. economy?

What role does manufacturing play in an innovation-driven economy such as the United States? What role will manufacturing play in the future U.S. economy?

Moderator

Dr. Teresa A. SullivanPresidentUniversity of Virginia

Speakers

Dr. Suzanne BergerRaphael Dorman-Helen Starbuck Professor of Political Science, andCo-Chair, Production in the Innovation Economy ProjectMassachusetts Institute of Technology

Dr. Paul J. HommertDirectorSandia National Laboratories, andPresidentSandia Corporation

Mr. Michael IdelchikVice President – Advanced TechnologiesGE Global Research

4:00 Closing Remarks Location: Auditorium

The Honorable David T. DanielsonAssistant Secretary for Energy Efficiency and Renewable EnergyU.S. Department of Energy

The Honorable Deborah L. Wince-SmithPresident & CEOCouncil on Competitiveness

4:30 Summit Concludes

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Exhibits

Additive Manufacturing in the 21st CenturyAdditive manufacturing (AM) techniques build precisely detailed and complex 3-D parts from scratch by depositing materials only where they are specified in a digital design file, layer by layer. This new approach to manufacturing has the potential to change the way we design, produce and use products while saving energy, shortening time-to-market, and enabling entirely new designs and products that cannot be produced any other way. This hands-on AM exhibit will allow you to hold AM parts, see a robot with more than 80 AM parts designed and built entirely by students, talk to industry representatives and see a commercial-scale machine build a part right in front of your eyes. Our exhibitors, America Makes and Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Manufacturing Demonstration Facility are examples of organizations working on AM.

The Future of Everyday CarsEmerging battery technology allows all-electric operation to fulfill the daily needs of most drivers. For very long trips, plug-in hybrids pair an internal combustion engine with the electric drive system, and for battery electric vehicles, the availability of fast-charging infrastructure is on the rise. Vehicles such as this are the future of everyday cars and will soon be more readily available on the market. GM’s Chevy Volt is an example of a plug-in hybrid vehicle that utilizes battery and manufacturing technologies based on enterprising technologies developed with the support of DOE. DOE has supported the development of electric drive technologies (e.g., batteries, motors) and utilizes plug-in electric vehicles in its fleet—illustrating its commitment to clean, fuel-efficient vehicles.

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Advanced Manufacturing Innovation TrendsSeveral innovation trends are emerging that will either disrupt or augment the future of manufacturing. These technologies are arising from start-ups and major tech companies. Integration and deployment into existing manufacturing companies will be vitally important to ensure competitive advantages are maintained. The hands-on exhibit will showcase three key technologies in the space of digital manufacturing, collaborative robotics, and nano-technologies. You will experience tools, such as tablets and wearable technologies, that enable dynamic instructions to communicate with a factory shop floor, a robot that is designed to work alongside humans on the shop floor, and nano-scaled particles that lowers energy consumption and extends the life of tooling. The exhibit includes examples of innovation integrations into manufacturing presented by John Deere, along with Rethink Robotics and NanoMech.

21st Century Smart Manufacturing: Building Infrastructure Powering Smart DecisionsSmart Manufacturing (SM) infrastructure enables all information about the manufacturing process to be available when it is needed, where it is needed, and in the form it is needed across the entire manufacturing value-chain to power smart decisions. Islands of efficiency become interoperable, networked, and resilient solutions to drive transformational manufacturing enterprise-performance for any size, level of technical sophistication, or resource availability at low cost. A scalable, cross-industry, networked-information SM Platform is needed to integrate existing and future plant-level data, simulations and systems across manufacturing seams and orchestrate business real-

time action. An open architecture will attract entirely new communities of solution providers to merge with and enhance existing solutions.

In this exhibit, learn about the EERE-supported project to develop this SM infrastructure through an industrial-scale demonstration, achieving transformational energy productivity gains. The exhibitors and project participants, Smart Manufacturing Leadership Coalition (SMLC) and Rockwell Automation (SMLC Member), are involved in a national initiative to develop and sustain the SM infrastructure. At one test bed in a U.S. Army manufacturing plant, Rockwell Automation technology anticipates extracting previously unavailable energy data and correlating it with production data to enable real-time energy reductions via the SM Platform.

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Geothermal Heat Pump System Geothermal heat pump systems are the most energy and cost efficient systems on the market for heating and cooling. The technology uses the relatively constant temperature of the earth (thermal energy) to provide heating, air conditioning and hot water. Ground and water temperatures, six feet below the earth’s surface, stay relatively constant throughout the year. This allows the system to provide extremely efficient heating or cooling all year long in virtually any climate. The Summit will demonstrate a Bosch geothermal heat pump system that is manufactured in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, for domestic use and export.

Automated Driving FunctionsMaking accident-free driving a reality will include achieving the goal of automated driving. Although fully-automated driving is still on the horizon, an increasing number of safety and driver assistance functions are now offered. Today, more than 90 percent of traffic accidents are the result of human error, and accidents around the world cause 1.3 million deaths each year.1 Reducing the number of accidents is a major focus of automotive research, development and manufacturing. For instance, if all vehicles were equipped with an automatic emergency braking system, up to 72 percent of rear-end collisions resulting in injury could be prevented.2 Representative examples of safety and driver assistance capabilities are presented by Bosch. The videos you see provide some insight into the work researchers are undertaking to develop increasingly sophisticated automated driving functions, ultimately enabling a fully-automated, more energy-efficient driving experience within the next decade.

1 Bosch Accident Research and U.S. Car Naturalistic Driving Study (2006).2 Bosch Accident Research, 2009-2013.

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Accelerating Manufacturing InnovationThe rapid transition of innovative technologies and processes from the laboratory to production is essential to the success of manufacturing enterprises in the 21st century. Accelerating manufacturing innovation includes focuses on: additive manufacturing, advanced materials, the digital tapestry for manufacturing, and next-generation electronics. These four strategic threads will drive breakthrough performance and affordability in new products and systems; they also closely align with newly formed Institutes in the National Network for Manufacturing Innovation (NNMI). The four threads are demonstrated by a multi-year Advanced Manufacturing Initiative, launched by Lockheed Martin, as presented in the exhibit. The exhibit features graphics, videos, and next-generation hardware that demonstrate the power, potential, and business value of investments in advanced manufacturing.

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BOARD

ChairmanMr. Samuel R. AllenDeere & Company

Industry Vice ChairmanMr. Michael R. SplinterApplied Materials, Inc.

University Vice ChairmanDr. Michael M. CrowArizona State University

Labor Vice ChairmanMr. William P. HiteUnited Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters

Chairman EmeritusMr. Charles O. Holliday, Jr.Bank of America

President & CEOThe Honorable Deborah L. Wince-Smith

EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

Mr. Thomas R. BaruchFormation 8 Partners

Dr. Gene D. BlockUniversity of California, Los Angeles

Mr. William H. BohnettWhitecap Investments LLC

Mr. James K. CliftonGallup, Inc.

Dr. John J. DeGioiaGeorgetown University

Dr. Alice P. GastLehigh University

Mr. James S. HagedornThe Scotts Miracle-Gro Company

Ms. Sheryl HandlerAb Initio

Dr. Paul J. HommertSandia National Laboratories

The Honorable Shirley Ann JacksonRensselaer Polytechnic Institute Dr. Linda P. KatehiUniversity of California, Davis

Dr. Pradeep K. KhoslaUniversity of California, San Diego

Dr. Steven KnappThe George Washington University

Mr. John E. McGladeAir Products

Mr. James B. MillikenUniversity of Nebraska

Dr. Harris PastidesUniversity of South Carolina

Mr. James M. PhillipsNanoMech, Inc.

Mr. Nicholas T. PinchukSnap-on Incorporated

Prof. Michael E. PorterHarvard Business School

Dr. Luis M. ProenzaThe University of Akron

Mr. Punit RenjenDeloitte LLP

Mr. Robert L. ReynoldsPutnam Investments

Dr. Kenan E. SahinTIAX LLC

Mr. Mayo A. Shattuck, IIIExelon Corporation

Dr. Lou Anna K. SimonMichigan State University

Mr. Edward M. SmithUllico Inc.

Mr. Lawrence WeberW2 Group, Inc.

Ms. Randi WeingartenAmerican Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO

Dr. Robert J. ZimmerThe University of Chicago FOUNDER

John A. YoungHewlett-Packard Company

Council on Competitiveness Board and Executive Committee

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GENERAL MEMBERSHIP

Dr. Michael F. AdamsThe University of Georgia

Mr. Joseph A. AluttoThe Ohio State University

Dr. Joseph E. AounNortheastern University

Mr. J. David Armstrong, Jr.Broward College

Mr. Neil Z. AuerbachHudson Clean Energy Partners

Dr. James F. BarkerClemson University

The Honorable Sandy K. BaruahDetroit Regional Chamber

Dr. Mark P. BeckerGeorgia State University

Ms. Stephanie W. BergeronWalsh College

Mr. George BlankenshipLincoln Electric, North America

Dr. Joel BloomNew Jersey Institute of Technology

Dr. Lee C. BollingerColumbia University

Mr. Terry BostonPJM Interconnection

Dr. Richard H. BrodheadDuke University

Dr. Robert A. BrownBoston University

Mr. Goodloe E. ByronPotomac Energy Fund

Mr. Steve CardonaNzyme2HC, LLC

Dr. Robert L. CaretUniversity of Massachussetts

Dr. Curtis R. CarlsonSRI International

Dr. Roy A. ChurchLorain County Community College

Dr. James P. ClementsWest Virginia University

Dr. Mary Sue ColemanUniversity of Michigan

The Honorable Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr.Purdue University

Dr. William W. DestlerRochester Institute of Technology

Mr. Ernest J. DianastasisCAI

Mr. Daniel R. DiMiccoNucor Corporation

Dr. Joseph A. DiPietroThe University of Tennessee

Dr. Nicholas B. DirksUniversity of California, Berkeley

Dr. Charlene M. DukesPrince George’s Community College

Dr. Robert A. EasterUniversity of Illinois

Mr. Jeff M. FettigWhirlpool Corporation

Dr. Carol L. FoltThe University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Mr. Kenneth C. FrazierMerck & Co., Inc.

Mr. John A. FryDrexel University

Dr. Judy L. GenshaftUniversity of South Florida

Mr. Gregory E. GlarosSYNEXXUS, Inc.

Mr. Robert B. GraybillNimbis Services, Inc. Mr. Michael P. GregoireCA Technologies

Mr. Robert GreifeldThe NASDAQ OMX Group, Inc.

Dr. Amy GutmannUniversity of Pennsylvania

Mr. Peter T. HalpinWorld Resources Company

Dr. Philip J. HanlonDartmouth College

Dr. Patrick T. HarkerUniversity of Delaware

Ms. Marillyn A. HewsonLockheed Martin Corporation

Dr. John C. HittUniversity of Central Florida

Mr. John D. HofmeisterJKH Group

Mr. Jeffrey R. ImmeltGeneral Electric Company

Dr. Lloyd A. JacobsUniversity of Toledo

Ms. Madeleine S. JacobsAmerican Chemical Society

Fr. John I. JenkinsUniversity of Notre Dame

Mr. Jeffrey A. JoerresManpowerGroup

Council on Competitiveness Membership

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Dr. John P. JohnsonEmbry-Riddle Aeronautical University

Dr. Robert E. JohnsonBecker College

Dr. Lester A. LeftonKent State University

Dr. J. Bernard MachenUniversity of Florida

Mr. Bill MahoneySCRA

Dr. Sally MasonUniversity of Iowa

Dr. David MaxwellDrake University

Mr. Sean McGarveyBuilding and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO

Mr. Mark McGoughIoxus, Inc.

Dr. Michael A. McRobbieIndiana University

Dr. Carolyn MeyersJackson State University

Mr. Paul MichaelsMars, Incorporated

Dr. Richard K. MillerFranklin W. Olin College of Engineering

Dr. H. Keith Moo-YoungWashington State University Tri - Cities

Dr. Martin J. Murphy, Jr.CEO Roundtable on Cancer

Dr. Mark G. MykityshynTangible Software, Inc.

Mr. Mark A. NordenbergUniversity of Pittsburgh

Mr. Keith D. NosbuschRockwell Automation, Inc.

Dr. Santa J. OnoUniversity of Cincinnati

Dr. Eduardo J. PadrónMiami Dade College

Dr. David W. PershingUniversity of Utah

Dr. G. P. “Bud” PetersonGeorgia Institute of Technology

Dr. William C. Powers, Jr.The University of Texas at Austin

Dr. Edward RayOregon State University

Dr. L. Rafael ReifMassachusetts Institute of Technology Mr. Ralph ResnickNational Center for Defense Manufacturing and Machining

Mr. Rory RiggsBalfour, LLC

Mr. Thomas W. RossThe University of North Carolina

Mr. Douglas RothwellBusiness Leaders for Michigan

VADM John R. RyanCenter for Creative Leadership

Mr. E. Scott SantiIllinois Tool Works Inc.

Dr. Leonard A. SchlesingerBabson College

Dr. David E. ShawD. E. Shaw Research

Mr. Scott D. SheffieldPioneer Natural Resources Company

Dr. David J. SkortonCornell University

Mr. Frederick W. SmithFedEx Corporation

Mr. Jack StackSRC Holdings Corporation

Ms. Susan S. StautbergPartnerCom Corporation

Dr. Charles W. StegerVirginia Polytechnic Institute and State University

Dr. Elisa StephensAcademy of Art University

Mr. Edward StolperCalifornia Institute of Technology

Dr. Elizabeth StrobleWebster University

Dr. Teresa SullivanUniversity of Virginia The Honorable Subra SureshCarnegie Mellon University

Dr. Satish K. TripathiState University of New York at Buffalo

Dr. Thomas M. UhlmanNew Venture Partners LLC

Dr. Steve L. VanAusdleWalla Walla Community College

Mr. Frederick H. WaddellNorthern Trust Corporation

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Dr. Jeffrey WadsworthBattelle Memorial Institute

Mr. Joseph L. WelchITC Holdings Corp.

Dr. Kim A. WilcoxUniversity of California, Riverside

Mr. Keith E. WilliamsUnderwriters Laboratories Inc.

Dr. Heather WilsonSouth Dakota School of Mines & Technology

Mr. Rick E. WinninghamTheravance, Inc.

Dr. W. Randolph WoodsonNorth Carolina State University

Dr. Mark S. WrightonWashington University in St. Louis

Mr. Paul A. YarossiHNTB Holdings Ltd

INTERNATIONAL AFFILIATE

Ms. Amy EricsonAlstom Inc.

NATIONAL LABORATORY PARTNERS

Dr. Bret E. KnappLawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Dr. Eric D. IsaacsArgonne National Laboratory

Dr. Michael KlusePacific Northwest National Laboratory Dr. Thomas E. MasonOak Ridge National Laboratory

NATIONAL AFFILIATES

Mr. Marc ApterIEEE–USA

Ms. Rebecca O. BagleyNorTech

Mr. James C. BarroodRothman Institute of Entrepreneurship

Dr. Walter G. BumphusAmerican Association of Community Colleges

Ms. Cathleen A. CampbellU.S. Civilian Research & Development Foundation

Mr. C. Michael CassidyGeorgia Research Alliance, Inc.

Mr. Jeffrey FinkleInternational Economic Development Council

Dr. Eric FriedlanderAmerican Mathematical Society

Mr. Richard GreféAIGA

Mr. Dominik KnollWorld Trade Center of New Orleans

Mr. Jack E. KosakowskiJunior Achievement USA

Dr. Alan I. LeshnerAmerican Association for Advancement of Science

Dr. Paul C. MaxwellThe Bi-National Sustainability Laboratory

Mr. Jack E. MiddletonSMC3 LTC Harrison A. PageOak Ridge Associated Universities

Dr. Hunter R. RawlingsAssociation of American Universities

Mr. Steven G. ZylstraArizona Technology Council

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DISTINGUISHED & SENIOR FELLOWS

The Honorable Erich Bloch

The Honorable Daniel S. Goldin

The Honorable Bart J. Gordon

The Honorable Alexander A. Karsner

The Honorable Alan P. Larson

Mr. Edward J. McElroy

Mr. John F. Mizroch

Ms. Michelle Moore

The Honorable Thomas Ridge

Dr. Anthony J. Tether

SENIOR ADVISOR

Ms. Jennifer S. Bond

Ms. Nancy Smith-Nissely

STAFF

Mr. William C. BatesExecutive Vice President and Chief of StaffTreasurer and Secretary to the Board

Mr. Chad EvansExecutive Vice President

Dr. Cynthia R. McIntyreSenior Vice President

Ms. Cathy TripodiSenior Vice President

Ms. Lisa HannaVice President

Ms. Patricia A. HennigController

Mr. Mohamed N. KhanVice President

Ms. Deborah KoolbeckVice President

Mr. Christopher MustainVice President

Mr. Zachary SchaferSenior Policy Director

Dr. Clara SmithSenior Policy Director

Mr. Michael BushPolicy Director

Mr. Gourang WakadeDirector, Membership & Strategic Development

Mr. Mark KarkennyProgram Manager

Mr. Aaron S. MalofskyProgram Manager

Ms. Marie Plishka Program Manager

Mr. Phillip TypaldosProgram Manager

Ms. Marcy S. JonesAssistant to the President and Office Manager

Mr. Thomas TruebloodDatabase Administrator

Council on Competitiveness Fellows, Advisors and Staff

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WHO WE ARE

The Council’s mission is to set an action agenda to drive U.S. competitiveness, productivity and leadership in world markets to raise the standard of living of all Americans.

The Council on Competitiveness is the only group of corporate CEOs, university presidents and labor leaders committed to ensuring the future prosperity of all Americans and enhanced U.S. competitiveness in the global economy through the creation of high-value economic activity in the United States.

Council on Competitiveness1500 K Street, NW, Suite 850Washington, D.C. 20005T 202 682 4292F 202 682 5150www.compete.org

HOW WE OPERATE

The key to U.S. prosperity in a global economy is to develop the most innovative workforce, educational system and businesses that will maintain the United States’ position as the global economic leader.

The Council achieves its mission by:

• Identifying and understanding emerging challenges to competitiveness

• Generating new policy ideas and concepts to shape the competitiveness debate

• Forging public and private partnerships to drive consensus

• Galvanizing stakeholders to translate policy into action and change

About the Council

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