Hundreds Of Business People Converge On Auckland
July 31 2008
Hundreds Of Business People Converge On Auckland
Hundreds of business people are being brought together in Auckland on August 18 to discuss new technology and investment opportunities which could earn New Zealand billions of dollars as the world responds to climate change.
The New Zealand Business Council for Sustainable Development is staging a "Clean Billions" CEO breakfast and symposium, bringing together New Zealand clean technology developers, major investors from New Zealand and overseas, and policy and other decision makers.
The symposium is a curtain raiser for the 4th Australia and New Zealand Business and Climate Change conference starting later the same day at Sky City convention centre.
The chair of the Tindall Foundation, Stephen Tindall, will speak at the Clean Billions Breakfast on his new-technology investment experience, and release a report he had prepared for him when he was about to become chair of the Climate Change Leadership Forum, on opportunities arising from emissions trading.
International speakers include:
the chair of
Eco2, David Williams, of Wales, who is leading his firm into
four hundred million pounds of new investment in UK
renewable energy projects
David Milroy, chairman and
chief executive of Hong Kong-based Pure Power Global, which
builds, creates, owns and operates a global network of
renewable energy businesses, including wind and biomass.
Pure Power is an investor in the breakthrough New Zealand
technology owned by Aquaflow which can create clean biofuel
using algae in sewage ponds
Other speakers include:
former research scientist, professor and "energy
evangelist" Dr James Watson, a former managing director of
Bio Joule Limited, which led the development of
lignocellulosic process to product bio ethanol and other
high-value by products
Mark Aspin, Manager of the
Pastoral Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium, leading a major
New Zealand effort to find ways to reduce emissions from
ruminant farm animals
Brian Mayo-Smith of BDP Spicers
and new technology investor company K1W1
Stuart McKenzie
of Endeavour Capital
Nick Gerritsen, Director of
Aquaflow Bionomic Corporation
Nick Eady, director of
Crest Energy, planning a major investment in wave
energy
Sean Simpson, founder of Lanzatech, which has
invited a process to turn some types of industrial emissions
into bio fuel
Trevor Stuthridge, General Manager of
Sustainable Design.
David Clarke, director of Cranleigh Merchant Bankers, will join Stephen Tindall in addressing questions at the Clean Billion breakfast.
Business Council Chief Executive Peter Neilson, says stunning new technology developed, and likely to be developed in New Zealand, to help firms lower emissions and address climate change, could earn billions in export earnings for the country.
The Clean Billions breakfast and half day symposium will look at the issues facing clean tech developers, what's stopping their rapid global commercialisation, and what investors here and internationally expect in order to back the major new industries.
"The world is moving to a low-carbon economy. New Zealand is a source of low-carbon innovation. We expect the country will make billions from this if it can rapidly commercialise the new technology now being developed.
The Clean Billions breakfast and symposium programme is available here http://www.nzbcsd.org.nz/publicevent.asp?EventID=568
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