Craig Hart
Biography
Adjunct Professor Craig A. Hart serves as Executive Director of the 91ÊÓƵ Energy and Climate Center at 91ÊÓƵ’s Elisabeth Haub School of Law. Professor Hart is also a lecturer at Johns Hopkins University’s Energy Policy & Climate program and a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council Global Energy Center.
Prof. Hart has worked with governments and projects in the Americas, Asia, the Middle East and Africa on renewables, energy efficiency, grid modernization and microgrids, and low carbon technologies for the fossil-fuel power generation sector. In the utility reform area, he advised Uzbekistan in its ongoing energy market and utility reform initiative leading to the restructuring of the state energy company Uzbekneftegaz, and advised the country of Georgia’s Ministry of Georgia in reforming its state electricity transmission company.
Professor Hart is a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers’ Council on Standards and Certification, which establishes and maintains ASME safety and performance standards, and monitors their implementation globally. Additionally, he serves on the International Standards Organization’s U.S. Technical Advisory Committee 265 for carbon sequestration technologies.
Professor Hart’s academic research concentrates on energy transition and decarbonization in the context of economic development and firm competitiveness. His work includes extensive focus on China, having lived and worked in China for almost a decade, teaching at Tsinghua University and Renmin (People’s) University of China, and consulting to intergovernmental organizations. He writes regularly on China’s energy transition, including (now in its fourth edition, 2019).
Prior to academia, Professor Hart practiced law in the energy infrastructure project finance, capital markets, and carbon management fields, representing project developers, lenders, and investors focusing on energy infrastructure, clean energy, and high-technology. His practice included practicing with the international law firms White & Case and O’Melveny & Myers, and serving as counsel to the Asia Development Bank’s Future Carbon Fund, a $115 million fund to finance renewables and carbon reduction projects under the Clean Development Mechanism in Asia and the Pacific.
Professor Hart earned a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology researching decarbonization paths with the aim of preventing dangerous climate change, a bachelor’s and law degree from the University of California at Berkeley, and a master’s in economics from New York University.
Education
- BA, University of California at Berkeley
- JD, University of California at Berkeley
- MS, New York University
- PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Publications
- , Development Technologies International, 2019
Areas of Interest
Climate change, decarbonization, energy policy