United States of America (Press Release) December 3, 2007 --
Climate change is here to stay. Its impact on the regulatory, political, economic and technological landscape of the electric utility industry is inevitable. How are industry captains -- such as Exelon CEO John Rowe -- planning to win in the new world?
Join Restructuring Today, your colleagues and these energy industry thought leaders on Monday, December 17 from noon to 1:00 PM CST for a live, powerful, engaging and interactive audio discussion on climate change:
• John Rowe is chairman, president and CEO of Exelon Corporation -- one of the nation's largest electric utilities with 5.4 million customers and revenues of more than $15 billion. Forbes ranked Exelon as the number-one utility company on its 2005 list of The Best Managed Companies in America and ranked Exelon as the number-one utility company in the US on its 2004 list of The World's 2,000 Leading Companies. Rowe has led electric utilities since 1984 serving as CEO of Central Maine Power Company, the New England Electric System and Unicom Corporation consecutively.
• Phil Sharp is president of Resources for the Future (RFF) -- an independent and nonpartisan research institution. RFF is the oldest Washington think tank devoted exclusively to policy analysis on energy, environmental and natural resource issues. Sharp leads a research and administrative staff of more than 80 people and oversees an institutional endowment of nearly $70 million. Sharp served ten terms as a member of the US House of Representatives from Indiana and a lengthy tenure on the faculty of the John F Kennedy School of Government and the Institute of Politics at Harvard University.
• Raymond Kopp is senior fellow and director of the climate and technology policy program at RFF. He specializes in the design of domestic and international polices to combat climate change. He will have just returned from the international conference on global warming in Bali. Kopp has been a member of the research staff and has served in a variety of management positions at RFF for 30 years. Kopp's interest in environmental policy began in the late 1970s when he developed techniques to measure the effect of pollution control regulations on the economic efficiency of steam electric power generation.
Ask the panel your burning questions plus hear answers to these questions and more:
• How can the push for non-carbon emitting energy sources create economic opportunity for utilities?
• How will changes impact the grid?
• Does America need 145 new nuclear plants as EIA says by 2030?
• Will legislation now in Congress help or hinder?
• Should we act now?
• Is a low-carbon policy realistic?
For details and ways to register, please visit:
http://www.restructuringtoday.com/climate-freepr
Join Restructuring Today, your colleagues and these energy industry thought leaders on Monday, December 17 from noon to 1:00 PM CST for a live, powerful, engaging and interactive audio discussion on climate change:
• John Rowe is chairman, president and CEO of Exelon Corporation -- one of the nation's largest electric utilities with 5.4 million customers and revenues of more than $15 billion. Forbes ranked Exelon as the number-one utility company on its 2005 list of The Best Managed Companies in America and ranked Exelon as the number-one utility company in the US on its 2004 list of The World's 2,000 Leading Companies. Rowe has led electric utilities since 1984 serving as CEO of Central Maine Power Company, the New England Electric System and Unicom Corporation consecutively.
• Phil Sharp is president of Resources for the Future (RFF) -- an independent and nonpartisan research institution. RFF is the oldest Washington think tank devoted exclusively to policy analysis on energy, environmental and natural resource issues. Sharp leads a research and administrative staff of more than 80 people and oversees an institutional endowment of nearly $70 million. Sharp served ten terms as a member of the US House of Representatives from Indiana and a lengthy tenure on the faculty of the John F Kennedy School of Government and the Institute of Politics at Harvard University.
• Raymond Kopp is senior fellow and director of the climate and technology policy program at RFF. He specializes in the design of domestic and international polices to combat climate change. He will have just returned from the international conference on global warming in Bali. Kopp has been a member of the research staff and has served in a variety of management positions at RFF for 30 years. Kopp's interest in environmental policy began in the late 1970s when he developed techniques to measure the effect of pollution control regulations on the economic efficiency of steam electric power generation.
Ask the panel your burning questions plus hear answers to these questions and more:
• How can the push for non-carbon emitting energy sources create economic opportunity for utilities?
• How will changes impact the grid?
• Does America need 145 new nuclear plants as EIA says by 2030?
• Will legislation now in Congress help or hinder?
• Should we act now?
• Is a low-carbon policy realistic?
For details and ways to register, please visit:
http://www.restructuringtoday.com/climate-freepr

Climate change is here to stay. How are energy industry captains – including Exelon CEO John Rowe -- planning to win in the new world?
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