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PROGRAM DIRECTOR
Dr. David A. T. Donohue is the Founder and President of
both IHRDC and Arlington Storage Corporation. Dr. Donohue is a technical
specialist, businessman, attorney and lecturer who has worked in
the development of energy projects where he has a senior equity
position. He is a former Associate Professor of Petroleum & Natural
Gas Engineering at Pennsylvania State University, and held various
positions in engineering and research for Exxon before becoming
a developer of energy projects. He is an active developer of underground
gas storage fields in New York State, an explorer for oil and gas
in the US and Ireland, and a developer of innovative learning systems
for the energy industry. He lectures broadly in the industry management
programs. Dr. Donohue holds a Ph.D. degree in Petroleum and Natural
Gas Engineering from Pennsylvania State University and a J.D. degree
from Boston College Law School.
Owen L. Anderson is the Eugene Kuntz Chair in Law in Oil,
Gas & Natural Resources at the University of Oklahoma and a
consultant on energy law and transactions. He has lectured on petroleum
law in several countries, including Norway, China, and Canada. Professor
Anderson is the co-author of several books including International
Petroleum Transactions, Cases and Materials on Oil and Gas Law,
and a multi-volume legal treatise, the Law of Oil and Gas, as well
as the author of numerous articles on oil and gas law. Professor
Anderson is a member of the Association of International Petroleum
Negotiators and a Trustee of both the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law
Foundation and the Energy and Mineral Law Foundation. He has B.A.
and J.D. degrees from The University of North Dakota.
Meg Annesley, former President of Tricentrol Oil Trading
in London and Houston, has more recently acted as an independent
trading advisor and consultant. During this period, she has concentrated
on the international oil trading markets for crude oil and petroleum
products, hedging and risk management strategies, and trading in
domestic markets. Previous experience includes eight years with
BP involved in international supply and trading. Ms. Annesley is
a Fellow of the Institute of Petroleum, former Director of the International
Petroleum Exchange of London, and Secretary of the Association of
U.K. Oil Independents.
Marshall E. Frank retired in September 2000 from Chem Systems
where he was President and Managing Director, responsible for its
international consulting activities in North and South America and
Asia Pacific. During his more than thirty years with the company,
he had technical and administrative responsibility for a large number
of multidisciplinary projects, both single client and multi-client
sponsored. Mr. Frank's areas of expertise include natural gas utilization
and conversion, the petrochemical industry, the refining/petrochemical
interface and alternative fuels. He also directed Chem Systems'
Financial Practice, which provided assistance to lenders on assessing
the various risks associated with the financing of major international
energy, petrochemical and polymer projects. Prior to Chem Systems,
he was involved in process evaluation, process engineering and startup
of many of Halcon/SD's proprietary processes at Scientific Design
Company. Mr. Frank received a B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering
from Cornell University.
Maher Habbal is Manager, Business Simulators Development/Applications
for IHRDC. He is responsible for developing and implementing the
business simulation models used in IHRDC management programs and
workshops. To date he has built five such simulators: one for the
oil industry, two for the gas, and two for power. His other responsibilities
include internal financial reporting, analysis and forecasting.
Before joining IHRDC, Mr. Habbal worked three years with Arthur
D. Little, Inc. as a Senior Financial Analyst on financial reporting
and modeling. Also, as a member of the teaching staff at the Arthur
D. Little School of Management Master of Science in Management Program,
he taught Finance, Economics and Accounting. Mr. Habbal holds a
Master of Science Degree in Management from Arthur D. Little School
of Management and a B.S. in Business Economics from the Lebanese
American University.
Derek Harvey is a Human Resource Specialist who spent 32
years with Mobil Oil Corporation specializing in Human Resource
Management. His career focus has been dedicated to finding ways
to improve organization effectiveness and enhancing employee contributions.
He has made major contributions at the corporate as well as the
international operating affiliate levels (Far East, Middle East,
West Africa, Europe and the US). His experiences have included grass
roots new projects, turnaround situations, mature organizations,
and corporate reorganizations. His most recent assignment was as
the Assistant to the Vice President of QatarGas. He has a record
of pioneering change, including the use of benchmarking, sophisticated
workforce analysis, a new succession planning and executive career
development program, work family programs; and global employee surveys.
He received the BSc in Economics (Honors) from Kingston University
and the Diploma of Industrial Administration (M.Sc. equivalent)
from Bath University.
Lynn Kettleson currently holds the position of Managing
Director for Clarke & Company's Reputation Management division.
Since joining Clarke in 1986, he has crafted and implemented hundreds
of crisis response programs and public affairs strategies for the
firm's varied clients. Lynn boasts particular expertise in managing
corporate and financial crises. Before Clarke & Company, Lynn
spent 15 years in the newspaper business with the last five years
as a business and financial editor at The Boston Herald.
Lynn formerly was an adjunct professor at Boston University School
of Communication and has served as a guest lecturer at Harvard Business
School, the Boston College Graduate School of Business and Emerson
College. He is a graduate of Iowa State University.
Dr. Shashi Kumar is a Professor and Dean of the Loeb-Sullivan
School of International Business and Logistics at Maine Maritime
Academy. His areas of teaching include International Business, International
Logistics, International Transportation, Managerial Economics and
Transportation Economics and Policies. He is a licensed Master Mariner
(UK), and has a M.S. degree in Maritime (Business) Management from
the Maine Maritime Academy, and a Ph.D. degree in Maritime Economics
from the University of Wales, United Kingdom.
Michael Lynch is Vice President, Global Oil, at WEFA Energy,
and a research affiliate at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technologys Center for International
Studies. He has combined S.B.S.M.
degrees in Political Science from M.I.T., and has performed a variety
of studies related to international
energy matters, including forecasting of the world oil market, energy
and security and corporate strategy
in the energy industries, as well as analysis of oil and gas supply.
His most recent major report,
published in 1996 by the Gas Research Institute, is International
Petroleum Price, Supply and
Demand: Projections Through 2020. He is the pastPresident
of the United States Association for
Energy Economics, and was the Program Chairman of their 1996 North
American Conference, as
well as being an appointed council member of the International Association
for Energy Economics.
His publications have appeared in Spanish, Arabic and Japanese,
as well as English.
Richard A. Norman is Founder and Partner of Essex Hydro
Associates, a developer
and operator of nine small-scale hydroelectric projects regulated
by the U.S. Federal
Energy Regulatory Commission. He also serves as Vice President and
Treasurer of
Honeoye Storage Corporation where he actively directs the construction,
financing,
and operations of this underground gas storage company in New York
State.
Mr. Norman has held energy project management positions at the Cabot
Corporation,
J. Makowski Associates, Inc., and Oxford Energy, Inc. He has served
as Special Assistant to the
United States Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Maritime Affairs,
advising on a program to
construct LNG tankers, and has been active in the development of
gas-fired cogeneration projects,
LNG facilities, and underground gas storage projects. Mr. Norman
graduated from the U.S. Naval
Academy, after which he served as an officer in the nuclear submarine
fleet for seven years. He then
received the MBA degree from Harvard Business School.
Robert F. Ryan, the former Chief Executive Officer of McBer
and Company in Boston, is a management consultant who works with
corporations to increase individual and group effectiveness and
performance. The primary focus of his work is improving leadership
through coaching, assessment and selection, and the design and implementation
of leadership development systems. Mr. Ryan’s clients include Mobil
Oil Corporation, General Electric, Rohm and Haas and Texas Instruments,
both domestically and internationally. He received both his B.S.
and M.S. degrees from Boston College.
Jennifer Sheehy is Managing Director of Clarke & Company's
Crisis Communication Center, one of the few centers dedicated to
delivering crisis response, planning and training services to clients
throughout North America and abroad. Jenn is nationally recognized
as an expert in the development of crisis communication plans and
simulation exercises for multiple and single-site client facilities
and has directed crisis response efforts for clients in numerous
industry sectors including but not limited to healthcare, energy
and the environment, manufacturing, education, financial services,
and food processing and packaging. A sought after speaker on crisis
communications, she is interviewed regularly on crisis issues by
national publications and broadcast outlets. She received a bachelor's
degree in American Civilization from Brown University.
Rob Taylor is Director of International Business Development
for IHRDC. He joined
the company in 1999 to coordinate worldwide sales and oversee business
development
in Asia Pacific and West Africa. He has spent his full professional
career in operations
management, international sales and business development for petroleum
related service
companies, beginning with Otis Engineering in the United States
and then progressing
through positions of increasing responsibility in Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Indonesia, Norway,
Oman and United Arab Emirates. With the merger of Dresser Industries
and Halliburton Company, he
completed his tenure with Halliburton as their Manager of Business
Development, Eastern Hemisphere.
Mr. Taylor holds a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engineering from the
University of Kentucky and is a long
term member of The Society of Petroleum Engineers. He has published
numerous articles in energy industry
periodicals.
Dr. Kermitt Walrond is Deputy Chairman of the Board of Directors
of Neal & Massy Energy Company in Trinidad & Tobago and
Chairman of the Board of Directors of NM Wood Group Ltd. He also
serves as Special Advisor to the Board of Governors of the Trinidad
& Tobago Institute of Technology. Prior to joining Neal &
Massy in 2000, he has had 28 years of international service with
British Petroleum, Amoco and then BP. His early experience was in
engineering and operations with British Petroleum (Trinidad) Ltd.
He served five years with Shell in their Houston Research Laboratory
before joining Amoco, where he held progressively more senior positions
including Regional Production Manager, Houston; Production Manager,
Norway; Manager of Engineering, Worldwide; and Vice President, Production
& Transportation, for BP's Caspian operations in Azerbaijan
and Georgia. He has three degrees in Petroleum Engineering - a B.Sc.
(Honors) from the University of Birmingham, United Kingdom, and
the MS and PhD from Pennsylvania State University. Dr. Walrond was
a Distinguished Lecturer for the SPE in 1988-89 and was elected
a Distinguished Member in 1991. The Pennsylvania State University
has honored him as a Centennial Fellow, College of Earth & Mineral
Sciences (1996) and as an Alumni Fellow (1997).
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