
Heavy transport’s critical role in the net zero energy transition
Fossil fuel alternatives for trucks are essential if we want to reach zero net emissions by 2050. Here are the challenges and opportunities for the transformation of this sector.
Chair in Economics at McGill University
Reuven Brenner is a professor in the Faculty of Management at McGill, a member of the Board of the McGill Pension Fund and a member of its investment committee.
He worked at Bank of America, Universo Conocimiento, EEN, Bell Canada, in companies and with investors in Canada, Mexico, USA and Europe. He has been involved in private equity markets as a partner in the Strategic Partners Party, has been a promoter of investment and business creation in Canada, as part of a “group of angels”, and also created his own start-up, “e-mortal.com”. He has also been serving on the boards of companies and institutions.
He was an expert witness in cases covering antitrust, bankruptcy, and financial matters. In other areas, the Quebec government asked him in 1995 to be a member of a commission whose mandate was to examine all aspects of the possible separation from Quebec. He also proposed to testify before Congressional Committees and the Banking and Finance Committee of the Senate of Canada, and worked with Poland’s central bank during the recent crisis.
His most recent books are A World of Chance (2008) and The Treasury Force (2002). His regular columns appeared in Forbes magazine, the Wall Street Journal, Asia Times and other financial press around the world. Brenner also received the Killam Award (1992), the Royal Society chose him as a “Fellow” (1999), and received a Fulbright Grant (1976). In February 2013, he was awarded a Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal for his contributions to his peers, to his community, and to Canada.
Brenner was born in Romania and immigrated to Israel in 1962. He served in the Israeli army from 1966 to 1969, during the Six-Day War, and again during the 1973 Yom Kippur War. The Fulbright scholarship took him in 1977 to Chicago, after completing his doctorate at the Hebrew University and working at the Bank of Israel, where he received the First Prize of the Israeli banks (for work with Saul Bronfeld, designing the indexed degrees). He has been living in Canada since 1980. He is fluent in English, French, Hebrew and Hungarian.
Categorías de conocimiento
Fossil fuel alternatives for trucks are essential if we want to reach zero net emissions by 2050. Here are the challenges and opportunities for the transformation of this sector.
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