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    Explore " exxon mobil" with insightful episodes like "Hydrogen Transportation Is In The News And I Am Excited. Find Out Why!", "Addressing Public Concerns On The Midwest’s Mach H2 Hydrogen Hub. Also, A Massive Project Announced In Europe’s Port Of Rotterdam.", "Jerry Glenn: Executive Director, The Millennium Project", "Chuck Collins: Director, Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies" and "A First Step To Green Steel And German Allies Team Up To Change The Hydrogen Economy." from podcasts like ""The Hydrogen Podcast", "The Hydrogen Podcast", "Global Connections Television Podcast", "Global Connections Television Podcast" and "The Hydrogen Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (36)

    Hydrogen Transportation Is In The News And I Am Excited. Find Out Why!

    Hydrogen Transportation Is In The News And I Am Excited. Find Out Why!

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 280, CES 2024 is full of hydrogen tech. Are we witnessing the hydrogen revolution in the US right now? The Federal Highway Administration seems to think so I'll go over this exciting news and give my thoughts on today's hydrogen podcast.


    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
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    DEMO THE H2 ADVANTAGE
    https://keyhydrogen.com/hydrogen-location-analytics-software/

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    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen


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    Addressing Public Concerns On The Midwest’s Mach H2 Hydrogen Hub. Also, A Massive Project Announced In Europe’s Port Of Rotterdam.

    Addressing Public Concerns On The Midwest’s Mach H2 Hydrogen Hub. Also, A Massive Project Announced In Europe’s Port Of Rotterdam.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 261,  Air Products goes big in the Netherlands and how our communities reacting to the MachH2 hub development. I dive into these topics on today's hydrogen podcast.


    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden

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    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
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    DEMO THE H2 ADVANTAGE
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    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

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    Jerry Glenn: Executive Director, The Millennium Project

    Jerry Glenn: Executive Director, The Millennium Project

    Jerry Glenn is a futurist who serves as the executive director of the Millennium Project.  He authors an annual publication, “State of the Future.” Previously, he was the executive director of the American Council for the United Nations University and the deputy director of Partnership for Productivity International. He was a U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer in Malawi. The Millennium Project is a global participatory think tank in 71 countries, called nodes, which identify major global and local issues. Most participants are from UN agencies, governments, NGOs, and an admixture of others. A few of the 15 Global Challenges include achieving sustainable development and balance climate change; provide clean water without conflict; preserve democracies against authoritarian regimes; empower women and girls; and productively utilize artificial intelligence (AI). Given the potential danger of AI, the UN Summit on the Future should include discussions for a UN Treaty on Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)– not the current narrow AI definition.

     

    Chuck Collins: Director, Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies

    Chuck Collins: Director, Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies

    Chuck Collins is the Director of the Program on Inequality and the Common Good at the Institute for Policy Studies, where he co-edits Inequality.org.

    His 2021 book is titled, The Wealth Hoarders: How Billionaires Spend Millions to Hide Trillions. His newest book is a novel, Altar to an Erupting Sun, which is a near-future story of one community facing climate disruption in the critical decade ahead. The protagonist, Rae, lays the primary responsibility on the doorstep of a small number of powerful people in the fossil fuel industries that have actively blocked meaningful responses.    Another related study to climate change and income inequality shows that private jet travel of the ultra-wealthy adds to the harmful emissions that contribute to global warming and the taxpayers are subsidizing that industry for many wealthy people who do not need financial assistance. A corollary of the jet subsidy study and the novel is that the income inequality gap is growing dramatically. For example, Over the past 50 years, the highest-earning 20% of U.S. households have steadily brought in a larger share of the country’s total income.  One percent owns 44% of the world’s wealth. Income inequality in the U.S. is the highest of all the G7 and OECD nations, according to data from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. Many of the following actions help create greater income inequality: deregulation, decline of labor unions, AI and automation, PACs and dark money donated to politicians, subsidies to industries such as fossil fuels and offshore tax havens.

     

    A First Step To Green Steel And German Allies Team Up To Change The Hydrogen Economy.

    A First Step To Green Steel And German Allies Team Up To Change The Hydrogen Economy.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 209, Germany announces their hydrogen version of The Magnificent Seven. Exxon's ammonia goes to Singapore. And Tata embraces hydrogen for steel. I'll go over all of this on today's hydrogen podcast.

    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com

    CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
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    WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? 
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    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen



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    MachH2 Makes The Cut As The Midwest Holds Out Hope For A Hydrogen Hub. Also, Solar Breakthrough That Is Big News For Hydrogen.

    MachH2 Makes The Cut As The Midwest Holds Out Hope For A Hydrogen Hub. Also, Solar Breakthrough That Is Big News For Hydrogen.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 207, A massive hydrogen hub in the US moves forward and a breakthrough in solar panel manufacturing could lead to sizeable reductions and electrolytic hydrogen development costs all of this on today's hydrogen podcast.

    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com

    CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/

    WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? 
    Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.com

    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

    Support the show

    Insights from Silicon Valley: Who’s Up, What’s Down & Why it Matters.

    Insights from Silicon Valley: Who’s Up, What’s Down & Why it Matters.

    0:00 -- Intro [Evan Epstein]

    1:30 -- Intro [David Beatty]

    3:50 -- Start of interview.

    4:55 -- Discussion on unicorns. [see research on unicorn exits]. 

    9:17 -- On the rise of private markets.

    11:57 -- On startup governance.

    15:31 -- The importance of governance in downturns (in contrast to bull markets).

    16:32 -- Elon Musk and his companies.

    18:42 -- On layoffs in the tech industry this year.

    20:05 -- How boards are adapting to the "digital tsunami" (board composition: age, 'tech savvy' directors, etc).

    23:21 -- On cybersecurity in the boardroom.

    29:00 -- On the surge of the electric vehicle (EV) industry and the IRA Act. Geopolitics and supply chain divestment from China. 

    36:26 -- The impact of the pandemic in Silicon Valley, particularly on remote work and tech migration. An opportunity for Canada.

    38:36 -- On Sam Bankman-Fried (FTX collapse). 

    41:15 -- Innovation by large established tech companies vs entrepreneurs/startups. Zero to One and The Power Law books.

    46:34  -- On dual-class share structures.

    50:58  -- On climate tech and Silicon Valley. 

    53:39  -- B-corps and public benefit corporations. [You can also check out E14 with Frederick Alexander on this topic]

    56:37  -- On ESG and shareholder activism. The Exxon Mobil proxy fight. The "anti-ESG" movement in the US (for example: Florida pulling $2B from BlackRock in largest anti-ESG divestment)

    58:23 - Final words.

    __

    David R. Beatty is a Professor at Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto and the Faculty Director of the David and Sharon Johnston Centre for Corporate Governance Innovation.

    You can find a video recording of this event [for a limited time] in this link.

    __

     You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

    __

    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

    __

    You can join as a Patron of the Boardroom Governance Podcast at:

    Patreon: patreon.com/BoardroomGovernancePod

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    Exxon Shakes Up The Hydrogen World With Some Interesting News And Rolls Royce Is Making Hydrogen Engines.

    Exxon Shakes Up The Hydrogen World With Some Interesting News And Rolls Royce Is Making Hydrogen Engines.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 132, Exxon announces a huge green ammonia project. And Rolls Royce wants to see how hydrogen performs and their turbines. All this on today's hydrogen podcast.


    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com

    CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/

    WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? 
    Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.com

    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

    Support the show

    Anne Sheehan: "The Advent of Say-on-Pay Forced the Engagement between Investors and Companies."

    Anne Sheehan: "The Advent of Say-on-Pay Forced the Engagement between Investors and Companies."

    0:00 Intro.

    1:31 Start of interview

    2:30 Anne's "origin story". She grew up in Colorado and after attending college, she moved to DC to work on the Hill and later in the Reagan Administration (U.S. Department of Energy). She moved to Sacramento in the late 1980s, where she worked in and out of state government. In her role as Chief Deputy Director of the CA Department of Finance (under Governor Schwarzenegger) she served on the boards of CalPERS and CalSTRS, among many other state boards. In 2007 Stanford issued the first Clapman Report, outlining best practices principles that she used to improve the governance of the CalSTRS board. The next year, she joined CalSTRS as the first Director of Corporate Governance, just in time for the GFC of 2008! She got very involved with the Dodd Frank legislation in 2011 and the rules that came out of it, such as say-on-pay, proxy access, and others. She retired from CalSTRS in 2018 and later joined the boards of Victoria Secret & Co, Cohn Roberts Holding Corp (NYSE:CRHC) and joined PJT Camberview as a senior advisor.

    8:45 On the governance of state-owned or public entities, and the influence on politics on those boards. "Anytime there is a politician on a board, there will be a political bent to it." She did not sit on the board of CalPERS when they went after Safeway in their labor dispute (2004). At CalSTRS, they worked very hard to make sure that they did not pursue any political agenda. They made sure to follow a process when making any divestment decision.

    11:58 On joining the board of CRHC, and the state of SPACs. CRHC is merging with Allwyn Entertainment, a European lottery operator in a listing valued at $9.3bn.

    14:57 On the evolution of ESG. "The history of ESG at CalSTRS goes way back, they had a Statement of Investment Responsibility in 1978, outlining 21 risk factors (now called ESG factors). These are investment risks to the portfolio if they are not managed properly." There is a history of divestment from South Africa by California public pension funds during the Apartheid regime. UNPRI in early 2000s. "One of the issues is all the terminology that is thrown around: CSR, ESG, impact investing, moral or ethical investment, DEI, etc." 

    20:27 On the evolution of shareholder engagements. The example of CalSTRS and CII. The Engine No.1-Exxon Mobil case. "I've always thought that the acronym should be GES, because the "G" of governance is the infrastructure that sets in place how boards should handle these issues." "The advent of Say-on-Pay forced the engagement between investors and companies."

    25:53 On the new criticisms of ESG and politicization of corporations.

    27:54 On the exclusion of Tesla from the S&P500 ESG Index

    30:42 On the new SEC climate disclosure rules. "It's probably one of the boldest and most progressive proposals that has come out, probably ever, from the SEC." 

    34:35 Board diversity and her thoughts on CA courts striking down SB-826 and AB 979, and what these rulings mean for board diversity. Her role in promoting board diversity from CalSTRS starting in 2008, the Diverse Director Database. The role of the big institutional investors such as BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street to promote board diversity. The Nasdaq board diversity rule. DEI beyond the boardroom (racial equity audits, pay gaps, etc.)

    41:26 On the governance of private companies, and the rise of private markets. The role of CalSTRS on improving governance of private companies via its LP role and influence.

    45:00 Her recommendations on how directors should handle down cycles and recessions. "The governance processes are there to be the guardrails during the uptime and the downturns."

    47:11 The 3 books that have greatly influenced her life in the last few years:

    1. Biography of President Ulysses Grant, by Ron Chernow (2017)
    2. From Strength to Strength, by Arthur C. Brooks (2022)
    3. The Road to Character, by David Brooks  (2015)

    48:40 - Who were your mentors, and what did you learn from them? 

    1. Rich Koppes (former GC of CalPERS), on the governance side.
    2. Bill Hauck (former head of the California Business Roundtable)

    49:45 - Are there any quotes you think of often or live your life by? "Play the hand that's dealt to you."  "Don't obsess over the bitter, go forward." "Perfect is the enemy of tGood" "80% is better than 100% if you can get it, or zero." "The only constant of life is change."

    50:39 - An unusual habit or an absurd thing that she loves: When she travels to a new city she gets on those hop in hop off buses (typically tourist traps). 

    51:10 - The living person she most admires: Zelensky and the people of Ukraine.

    Anne Sheehan is a former Director of Corporate Governance at CalSTRS and currently serves on the boards of Victoria's Secret & Co and Cohn Roberts Holding Corp (NYSE:CRHC) and is a senior advisor at PJT Camberview.

    __

     You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

    __

    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

    __

    You can join as a Patron of the Boardroom Governance Podcast at:

    Patreon: patreon.com/BoardroomGovernancePod

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    Climate Quickie: Why Guyana is a climate hero

    Climate Quickie: Why Guyana is a climate hero
    “It's not a story that gets told very often… about former colonial peoples standing up against the oil industry,” says Melinda Janki, the environmental lawyer taking on Exxon Mobil in one of South America’s most beautiful nature spots, Guyana. In this Climate Quickie, we learn about what’s going on in Guyana, and why deep sea oil drilling a carbon sink (i.e. a country which removes more carbon than it produces) is straight up “crazy”. Enjoyed this quickie? Why not listen to Melinda’s full episode on Climate Curious – How the Guyanese people are fighting big oil: https://tedxlondon.com/podcast/climate-curious-how-guyanese-people-fighting-big-oil/ Follow Climate Curious: Newsletter Instagram Twitter LinkedIn Facebook Suggest a topic you’d like Climate Curious to cover Created by TEDxLondon Produced by Josie Colter Edit, mix, master by Ben Beheshty Curated by Maryam Pasha  Hosted by Maryam Pasha and Ben Hurst

    Hydrogen Stocks Just Pummeled The S&P 500 In The First Quarter. Find Out What Has Investors Salivating.

    Hydrogen Stocks Just Pummeled The S&P 500 In The First Quarter. Find Out What Has Investors Salivating.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 105, With the first quarter of the year over, let's take a look at some hydrogen stocks and see how they're performing all of this on today's hydrogen podcast.

    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com

    CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/

    WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? 
    Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.com

    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

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    Does Houston Texas Still Have A Leg Up In Being The First And Major Hydrogen Hub In The United States? Two Global Leaders In Sustainable Technologies Are Collaborating Towards The Commercialization Of New Technology

    Does Houston Texas Still Have A Leg Up In Being The First And Major Hydrogen Hub In The United States? Two Global Leaders In Sustainable Technologies Are Collaborating Towards The Commercialization Of New Technology

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 096, Johnson Matthey and 8 Rivers Capital collaborate on producing clean hydrogen. And as Houston still have a leg up in being the first and major hydrogen hub in the United States, all of this on today's hydrogen podcast.   
     
    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden


    VISIT THE HYDROGEN PODCAST WEBSITE
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com

    CHECK OUT OUR BLOG
    https://thehydrogenpodcast.com/blog/

    WANT TO SPONSOR THE PODCAST? 
    Send us an email to: info@thehydrogenpodcast.com

    NEW TO HYDROGEN AND NEED A QUICK INTRODUCTION?
    Start Here: The 6 Main Colors of Hydrogen

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    Solving climate change through financial services, with Aspiration CEO Andrei Cherny

    Solving climate change through financial services, with Aspiration CEO Andrei Cherny
    In this conversation, we chat with Andrei Cherny, Co-Founder & CEO ofAspiration, a budding financial services platform for people who want to save the planet by neutralizing their carbon footprint. Their mission is massive, with ~5 million members making a difference in the fight against climate change. Andrei combines a background as an advisor to some of America’s top companies, the co-founder and president of a media start-up, a financial fraud prosecutor, a historian, a White House aide, a Navy reserve officer, and a nationally-recognized economic policy expert. Andrei has provided strategic counsel to companies such as Intel, Qualcomm, and Bank of America. He has worked with Elizabeth Warren to help start the successful fight for the new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. A former Clinton White House aide, he was the youngest White House speechwriter in American history. More specifically, we touch on American public policy and politics, speechwriting for Al Gore, The amalgamation of political theory and public legislation and environmental policy and a lack of trust by consumers in financial institutions lead to the founding of Aspiration Bank, and so so much more!Disclaimer here — this newsletter does not provide investment advice and represents solely the views and opinions of FINTECH BLUEPRINT LTD. Contributors: Lex, Laurence, Matt, Farhad, Mike, Daniella Want to discuss? Stop by our Discord and reach out here with questions.

    Explosión en refinería de Exxon Mobil en Baytown Texas

    Explosión en refinería de Exxon Mobil en Baytown Texas

    A un día de la celebración de la navidad, se elevó la demanda de pruebas rápidas de diagnóstico del Coronavirus.

    Administración de Drogas y Alimentos FDA, dio la aprobación federal para la prescripción de la primera pastilla antiviral para tratar el COVID-19.

    FBI pone a disposición de los padres una herramienta para guardar la información de sus hijos, en caso de desapariciones.

    Ciudad de Houston revela reporte sobre sistema de pensiones para el 2021.

    Robin Ferracone: "The U.S. Lags Other Regions In Terms of Using Stakeholder Measures in Executive Compensation"

    Robin Ferracone: "The U.S. Lags Other Regions In Terms of Using Stakeholder Measures in Executive Compensation"
    1. Intro.
    2. (1:08) - Start of interview.
    3. (1:42) - Robin's "origin story": she grew up in Indiana, "sought warmer weather" so she headed to Duke for college. She later got an MBA at Harvard and started her consulting career at Booz Allen in SF. Five years later she started her own firm, SCA Consulting, focusing on executive compensation and strategy, based out of L.A. She sold that firm to Mercer in 2001, stayed on with the firm until 2007 when she left to start her current firm Farient Advisors.
    4. (5:50) - "In the SCA days, executive compensation was commissioned by management, very rarely by boards of directors."
    5. (7:20) - Her take on the evolution of executive compensation since the '80s.
    6. (10:28) - Her description of her firm Farient Advisors.
    7. (12:07) - Her discussion of her firm's research study: "2021 and Beyond: Global Trends in Stakeholder Incentives" authored jointly with the Global Governance and Executive Compensation Group (GECN Group).
    8. (15:16) - Her experience on how to link stakeholder goals in executive compensation, particularly in connection to climate change, social matters and DEI.
    9. (24:37) - Her take on "moon shot equity grants" ("I am not in favor of them") and founder top-up grants.
    10. (28:43) - Her take on SPACs.
    11. (32:40) - Her take on the Exxon Mobil proxy fight with Engine No.1. "It's a watershed moment for corporate boards."
    12. (36:37) - Her take on human capital "it's time has come." "It's much more about people than it's ever been before." There are four areas of disclosure: 1) number of employees, 2) diversity, 3) profile of the workforce, and 4) retention of workforce.
    13. (39:34) - The book that has greatly influenced his life:
      1. Fair Pay, Fair Play: Aligning Executive Performance and Pay (2010), her own book! "It consumed my life for a year and a half."
      2. Aesop Fables. Collection of fables credited to Aesop, a slave and storyteller believed to have lived in ancient Greece.
    14. (42:03) - Her mentors: "I have a view that you can literally learn for anybody." 
    15. (44:29) - Her favorite quotes: "my favorite sayings have to do luck." Her father-in-law: "Luck is where you look for it."
    16. (45:04) - An unusual or absurd habit that she loves: fro-yo!
    17. (45:29) - The living person she most admires:  Misty Copeland.

    Robin Ferracone is the Founder and CEO of Farient Advisors. She is the author of the book “Fair Pay, Fair Play: Aligning Executive Performance and Pay” and is a frequent presenter for well-known organizations including Council of Institutional Investors, Society for Corporate Secretaries and Governance Professionals, the National Association of Corporate Directors (NACD), and The Conference Board, among others. Robin has written extensively on the topics of performance management, incentive plan design, goal setting, and corporate governance.

    If you like this show, please consider subscribing, leaving a review or sharing this podcast on social media. 

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     You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter @evanepstein

    LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack https://evanepstein.substack.com/

    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    You can follow Evan on social media at:

    Twitter: @evanepstein

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/epsteinevan/ 

    Substack: https://evanepstein.substack.com/

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    You can join as a Patron of the Boardroom Governance Podcast at:

    Patreon: patreon.com/BoardroomGovernancePod

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    3 Political Players from Global South: "Saints" or "Sinners"?

    3 Political Players from Global South: "Saints" or "Sinners"?

    from time to time, we, in the western liberal democracies, mostly with the best of intentions, from our ivory towers, pick sides rather easily when it comes to politics of Global South, without fully understanding the complexities. 

    Don’t believe me? Think about the co-operation that took place between former dictator of Pakistan, Musharraf and the west in early to mid 2000s, he wasn’t democratically elected, in fact he had ousted a democratically elected Prime Minister of his country in a coup de tat, and the west pretty much rolled out red carpets to him while he gave himself the title of “President”, think about how current dictator of Egypt, Sisi, who ousted a democratically elected politician, Morsi, now gets to shake hands with world leaders, clearly in both of these instances the liberal democracies chose to do business with dictators at the expense of our core values.

    Therefore, in this blog, I am writing about the supposed political activists or leaders from the Global South that the west is currently siding with and why I think siding with these supposed activists or leaders might be a mistake.

    Alexei Navalny:

    Alexei Navalny, currently being hailed as a hero in the west, rose to prominence in Russia by his supposed expose of corruption in Kremlin. Although he ran for the office of mayor in Moscow, he lost. A lot of people in the west do not know that Navalny has never held a public office in Russia, in fact he started in politics as a member of Russian liberal party, Yabloko, only to be expelled from the party for his “nationalist activities”. 

    Aung San Suu Kyi:

    Prior to the events of 2017 in Myanmar, where its military according to credible international organisations allegedly committed a genocide, Aung San Suu Kyi was hailed as a hero across the globe, because she supposedly stood for Democracy and was even awarded Nobel Peace Prize amongst many other accolades. However, since August 2017, she has not only failed to denounce the crimes committed against Rohingyas but also defended Myanmar’s military in International Court of Justice. 

    Juan Guaido:

    According to Sanctionskill.Org “Guaidó showed total unrestraint at the use of thug violence to meet his political goals. Before 2019, the only knowledge that the Venezuelan public had of him, outside of his constituency, was that he was one of the most enthusiastic supporters of the violent roadblocks that took the country to the brink of civil war in 2017. Numerous photos showed Guaidó, grinning ear to ear, alongside armed fascists who were responsible for the deaths of over a hundred people.”



    Joe Grundfest: On Capital Markets, Crypto Regulations, Board Diversity & Corporate Electoral Innovation.

    Joe Grundfest: On Capital Markets, Crypto Regulations, Board Diversity & Corporate Electoral Innovation.
    1. Intro.
    2. (1:42) - Start of interview.
    3. (3:11) - Joe's take on the rise of IPOs and SPACs since 2020. "There is a level where it is all entirely rational."
    4. (4:16) - Staying private vs going public in this environment. "In today's world, companies have three alternatives: do another VC round, a SPAC or an IPO."
    5. (6:43) -  On the fundraising environment: "This is historically unprecedented... due to fiscal and monetary stimulus throughout the U.S. and global economies." "But you have to combine that with the observation that we really do have some fundamental technological and economic changes going on."
    6. (8:47) - Are you bullish or bearish on the economy and markets? "I'm confused-ish"
    7. (10:46) - On Bitcoin, and the new Bitcoin Law from El Salvador (making it legal tender in that country): It has serious repercussions for US law (currency vs security, money transmission, tax implications, etc).
    8. (12:56) - On US public corporations adding Bitcoin to the corporate treasuries. On bitcoin mining ("dirty, dirty, dirty") and the distinctions between "proof of work" and "proof of stake" cryptos. On Elon's decision to not accept Bitcoin to purchase Teslas.
    9. (16:12) - On DeFi: "Once regulators figure out what's going on here, they are going to try to crush it." "You know, the SEC has no idea what to do with crypto. The SEC is asking for legislation, they're actually begging for legislation, because if you get legislation, then it's not their job. Unless (the SEC's nightmare) Congress gives the SEC all the authority it needs to regulate crypto and says to the SEC: here you go, do it."
    10. (19:30) - On DAOs: "They can lead to chaos. I mean, what is the governance structure? Each one of these has a very different governance structure. And one of the things that we know is that there's no perfect governance structure, right? If you want to over intellectualize this, go back to Ken Arrow's Impossibility Theorem where he demonstrated that there are lots of criteria we would like to see in a society and you can't simultaneously have them all. Well, you know, that's a super brainiac way of saying that governments are always going to fail to one degree or another. Putting the problem of social organization on the blockchain does not solve the problem of social organization. It simply replicates the problem on the blockchain, right? So why do people think that putting an insoluble problem on the blockchain solves the insoluble problem is an insoluble problem to me."
    11. (21:13) - On the different approach to blockchain by computer scientists and lawyers. The Stanford Center for Blockchain Research. "What can I say? The computer science people don't get sued 25 times... you know, in computer science, your equations are generally fairly well behaved. And if you write a system, you know how it's going to operate. We're lawyers, we deal with people. Not only deal with people, we deal with plaintiffs. It's a very different problem. I mean look, in engineering you're often dealing with fairly well behaved systems. If systems were well-behaved, you wouldn't need lawyers. So what can I say? I only go where there's chaos and mayhem."
    12. (22:57) - On SB-826 (gender) board diversity quota in CA: "the data suggests pretty strongly, almost conclusively, that SB-826 has worked. The number of women on corporate boards in California has increased significantly. The majority of corporations in CA are now in compliance with SB-826."
    13. (24:23) - On AB-979 (minorities) board diversity quota in CA: "figuring out the effect of the AB 979 is more difficult. It's very hard to separate that out from what I call the George Floyd effect."
    14. (25:21) - On the constitutionality of these laws: "there's a deeper mystery here. And something that I think is really more profound. If you look objectively at both pieces of legislation, and if you ask yourself, what's the probability that the U.S. Supreme court as currently composed (a 6-3 conservative majority) would find either one of these pieces of legislation is constitutional? The answer would be a resounding no." "The fascinating thing is typically when legislation is potentially unconstitutional, everybody's jumping up and down and they're suing to get it invalidated. Here, not only is that not happening, but the vast majority of corporations are complying with legislation."
    15. (27:33) - "These bills are what I would call The Miracle of Unconstitutional Legislation": "These are the most effective unconstitutional pieces of legislation that I've ever seen in American history. And I think the answer for why they've been so successful is that at least when it comes to legislating the composition of corporate boards, the majority of America is out of tune with Supreme court doctrine regarding the existence of quotas." "Diversity on corporate boards is being treated very differently to diversity in other areas of society and the parties most directly affected aren't complaining about it. It's a remarkable situation."
    16. (31:08) - On stakeholder capitalism and the BRT restatement of 2019: "This is nothing new. You always had to consider all of the constituencies, otherwise you're out of business."
    17. (34:45) - On Engine No. 1 proxy fight with Exxon Mobil:  "This is huge. I think going forward, every proxy contest is going to be measured as either before Exxon or after Exxon. What it demonstrates is that in today's world, you don't need a large equity position. What you really need to understand is the story that is going to resonate with the large institutional investors. Engine No. 1  had a terrific story that resonated extraordinarily well. They had the perfect target because Exxon had built up a reputation over decades as being the most arrogant corporation in the United States. They'd basically refused to listen to institutional investors. You combine that with the big push towards ESG investing, and the fact that many institutions now feel they can't afford to be on the wrong side of ESG momentum. You know, it created a situation where if you were economically and politically smart, and these guys I think are, you would be able to leverage your position by a factor of 2,500 and grab three seats on the Exxon board of directors. They did something that people thought would have been impossible. And I think it's highly innovative and you're going to see many forums of what I would call corporate electoral innovation over the next year or two. And a lot of it will wind up pushing the ESG direction."
    18. (38:04) - "Look, my joke line about ESG is that given the current state of the art, it stands for Extremely Subjective Guessing"!

    Joseph A. Grundfest is an expert on capital markets, corporate governance, and securities litigation. His scholarship has been published in the Harvard, Yale, and Stanford law reviews, and he has been recognized as one of the most influential attorneys in the United States. Professor Grundfest founded the Stanford Securities Class Action Clearinghouse, which provides detailed, online information about the prosecution, defense, and settlement of federal class action securities fraud litigation. He launched Stanford Law School’s executive education programs and continues to co-direct Directors’ College, the nation’s leading venue for the continuing professional education of directors of publicly traded corporations. He is also a senior faculty member with the Arthur and Toni Rembe Rock Center for Corporate Governance. Additionally, he is co-founder and director of Financial Engines and a director of Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts & Co. Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty in 1990, Professor Grundfest was a commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission, served on the staff of the President’s Council of Economic Advisors as counsel and senior economist for legal and regulatory matters, and was an associate at Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering. Early in his career he was a research associate at the Brookings Institution and an economist and consultant with the RAND Corporation.

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

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    Music/Soundtrack (found via Free Music Archive): Seeing The Future by Dexter Britain is licensed under a Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License

    Big News In The CCUS (Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage) Market And Why Houston Texas Is Poised To Become A Major Player In CCUS.

    Big News In The CCUS (Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage) Market And Why Houston Texas Is Poised To Become A Major Player In CCUS.

    Welcome to The Hydrogen Podcast!

    In episode 018, There is alot of positive news in the CCUS (Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage) market and it needs to be addressed. CCUS companies in United States and Canada are both utilizing existing governmental tax credit to their benefit and the UK is injecting resources into their CCUS programs to help speed up their results. 

    Thank you for listening and I hope you enjoy the podcast. Please feel free to email me at info@thehydrogenpodcast.com with any questions. Also, if you wouldn't mind subscribing to my podcast using your preferred platform... I would greatly appreciate it. 

    Respectfully,
    Paul Rodden

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