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Matthew H. Brown
Energy Supply and Demand

Mr. Matthew Brown has 20 years of experience in the energy field. He is a Principal of Harcourt Brown LLC and has worked in Europe, North America, and Asia on energy efficiency, biofuels, wind power, solar energy, critical infrastructure protection, electricity transmission, energy regulation and restructuring, alternative fuel vehicles, and a variety of other topics. His specialties within these areas relate to clean energy finance as well as state policy development and analysis. State legislatures and the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission have asked him to testify on close to 100 occasions in almost three dozen states. Mr. Brown has written more than 50 articles and books on renewable energy, energy efficiency, energy regulation, transmission, energy technology, and critical infrastructure protection. Matthew holds a Bachelor of Arts degree from Brown University and an MBA from New York University.
Climate News

Obama Gets a Menu of Climate Actions He Can Take Without Congress
President Obama could invoke strong climate policies, like gasoline carbon limits, without congressional input before world leaders convene this fall to negotiate an international global warming treaty, a research group says in a plan provided to the administration.

Whitman & Peterson: Climate Bill Should Top the Congress’ To-Do List
As Congress approaches the August recess, our economy, energy and environmental security needs still top the to-do list of the president and Congress. This summer the Center for Climate Strategies and the Clean and Safe Energy Coalition have outlined how Congress can put a national strategy in place that gets all three on the same page: by passing comprehensive national climate change and energy policy that reflects our best policy options for immediate action.

New Climate and Energy Policies Could Create 2.5 Million Jobs, Hold Down Energy Costs
July 22, 2010 -- New greenhouse gas emissions and energy policies at the Federal level could generate as many as 2.5 million new jobs and $134 billion in economic activity in the U.S. while keeping energy costs down, according to a new report from the Center for Climate Strategies, published with Johns Hopkins University.

Colorado legislature raises state RES, move seen creating jobs
A coalition of stakeholders who worked on the Colorado Climate Panel's were critical to the new legislation’s passage. Since investor-owned utilities supply 60% of Colorado’s electricity, this implements most of the Panel recommendation (adopted by the Governor) on renewable energy standards (RES).
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