Peter Gross

Peter Gross is a technology and energy internationally recognized expert whose career spans over three decades. He is presently the Managing Partner of PMG Associates a consulting and advisory firm. In addition, he sits on several boards of directors and boards of advisors for public, private, and not-for-profit companies.

Until end of August 2019, he led the Mission Critical Systems group at Bloom Energy, the premier manufacturer of solid oxide fuel cells.

Prior to joining Bloom, he was the Managing Partner for HP’s Consulting Services focusing on Carbon, Power and Critical Facilities, where he was responsible for strategic technology planning and business development. He was the co-founder and CEO of EYP Mission Critical Facilities, Inc., the preeminent consulting, and engineering firm dedicated to the design and operations of data centers. In this position, he has played a pivotal role in the rapid growth of EYP MCF’s business since its founding in 1997, leading to its acquisition by HP in 2008.

Peter is recognized as a thought leader in the mission-critical information, communication, and infrastructure design realm, has published numerous technical papers in the field and is a frequent speaker at international events. His emphasis centers on mission-critical facilities, high-reliability design, power quality, energy and sustainability.  Peter has more than 30 years’ experience in the engineering and design of power systems as applied to data centers, trading floors, command and control centers, and telecommunication and broadcasting facilities.

Peter has been at the forefront of many innovative concepts that have contributed to the data center industry evolution. He was co-awarded patents for the modular, prefabricated FlexDC product, for Direct Current power distribution topologies in data centers and for fuel cells data center architectures.

Peter is the recipient of 2010 Data Center Dynamics “Outstanding Contribution to the Industry” award. He also received the 2020 award for Outstanding Contribution to the Digital Infrastructure Community and was inducted in the Infrastructure Masons Hall of Fame. He was quoted in many publications, including The New York Times, Businessweek, and Computerworld.

A Senior IEEE Member and a Registered Professional Engineer, Peter was one of the contributors to IEEE Standard 3006.7-2013, “Recommended Practice for determining the reliability of 7×24 Power Systems in industrial and commercial facilities”.

Peter is the Chairman of Cato, a Software Defined Power company, and serves on the Board of Directors of Polar Power, Edgevana, CE+T America and Chilldyne. He also chairs the advisory council of several corporations, including Vertiv and Bloom Energy.

He is a Bain External Advisor, an Advisory Council Partner and a Master of Infrastructure Masons, a member of the Advisory Board of UCLA’s Institute of Environment and Sustainability and of Southern Methodist University’s Data Center System Engineering Board of Advisors at Lyle School of Engineering.

David Groves

Scott Gruber

Scott is a designer and developer building an ethical design practice grounded in accessibility, performance and aesthetics. He build sites that work for everyone, load fast and look good. He maintains and develops the UCLA Institute of the Environment and Sustainability website, servers and technology stack.

He is a WordPress senior developer. And is comfortable coding in smaller content management systems such as CraftCMS, Perch and the Jamstack. He enjoys writing modern CSS and semantic HTML and serves as a translator between comms, academics, researchers, project managers, content strategists, UX designers and programmers.

He is a web accessibility specialist, a certified Carpentries instructor and teaches design and coding workshops for students, staff and faculty. He is a member of UCLA UX and previously served as a volunteer at the UCLA Health System’s UX and patient technology council.

Some of his hobbies include playing classical guitar, bird watching by bike and studying Mandarin Chinese.

Jamie Guerra

Alex Hall

Alex Hall is the Director of the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability, a Professor in the Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Director of the Center for Climate Science at UCLA and Faculty Director of UCLA’s Sustainable LA Grand Challenge. His research focuses on reducing climate change uncertainty at both regional and global scales.

At the regional level, he has advanced the development of downscaling techniques to better understand climate change at scales most relevant to people and ecosystems. Alex and his team at the Center for Climate Science apply these methods to create neighborhood-scale projections of future climate. They have recently completed downscaling studies for the Los Angeles region and the Sierra Nevada, with ongoing projects investigating the future of extreme precipitation and wildfire risk in California.

Alex served as a Lead Author for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s Fifth Assessment Report chapter on regional climate change and as a Contributing Author for its chapter on climate model evaluation. He was also the Coordinating Lead Author of the Los Angeles Region Report, part of California’s Fourth Climate Change Assessment. His work has earned him several accolades, including the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Atmospheric Sciences Ascent Award in 2016 and the AGU’s Future Horizons in Climate Science: Turco Lectureship in 2019.

Oliver Hankinson

Dr. Hankinson is a Professor of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, and Director of the Doctoral Program in Molecular Toxicology. He received his Ph.D. in genetics from Cambridge University, England, in 1972. He did postdoctoral research in mammalian cell genetics at Harvard University, the University of Colorado, and the University of California, Berkeley, before joining the UCLA faculty in 1979. He was Director of the Carcinogenesis program of the UCLA Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center from 1994 to 2003, and Vice-Chair for Research of the Department of Pathology from 1997 to 2003. In 2000 he was founding director of the Molecular Toxicology Ph.D. program.

Benoît Goossens

Leryn Gorlitsky

Catherine Graham

Antonio Guillén Servent