Electricity Authority Chief Executive-designate
27 May 2010
Media Release
For immediate release
Electricity Authority
Chief Executive-designate selected
Chair of
the Electricity Authority Establishment Brent Layton has
today announced that Carl Hansen has been selected as Chief
Executive-designate of the Electricity Authority.
Mr Hansen is a Wellington-based economist and independent company director. From 2006 to 2009, he was Chief Executive and Chief Operating Officer of the Marketplace Company (M-co) Limited, a specialist operator of wholesale energy markets, registries and internet-based trading platforms.
He has also held various roles with the Reserve Bank, The Treasury, the New Zealand Business Roundtable, and with the Law and Economics Consulting Group. He holds a Master’s degree in Economics from the University of Michigan.
“The Establishment Board and I are pleased
to appoint Carl to this role. His mix of commercial and
policy experience and his knowledge of the electricity
sector and market design will be a huge asset to the
Establishment Board and to the Electricity Authority,”
Brent Layton said.
The new authority is one of the
proposals to come out of the 2009 review of the electricity
sector. The Authority will be responsible for promoting
competition, reliable supply and efficient operation of the
electricity market for the long-term benefit of all
electricity consumers. The Authority will be established
under the Electricity Industry Bill, currently before
Parliament, as an independent Crown entity.
The new
entity will take over some of the functions of the existing
Electricity Commission on 1 October 2010. Other functions of
the Commission will be transferred to the Commerce
Commission, Transpower, the Ministry of Economic Development
and the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Authority (EECA).
In the meantime the Commission is progressing in conjunction
with market participants its Market Development Programme.
The Establishment Board welcomes and supports the
Commission’s efforts to maintain the momentum of changes
to the electricity
market.
ENDS