ERCOT Energized speakers
Convenor: Ross Baldick
William W. Hogan
Shmuel Oren
Hugh Outhred
Convenor: Ross Baldick

Ross Baldick is Professor in the Department
of Electrical and Computer Engineering at
The University of Texas. Professor Baldick's
research focuses on the interplay between
engineering constraints and economics in
electricity markets. He received his
undergraduate degrees from the University
of Sydney, Australia and his MS and PhD from
the University of California, Berkeley.
William W. Hogan

William W. Hogan is the Raymond Plank Professor of Global Energy Policy. He is Research Director of the Harvard Electricity Policy Group at M-R CBG and Chair of the Kennedy School Faculty Appointments Committee. Hogan has served on the faculty of Stanford University, where he founded the Energy Modeling Forum (EMF), and he is past president of the International Association for Energy Economics (IAEE). Professor Hogan's research focuses on the interaction of energy economics and public policy, which, in recent years, has meant an emphasis on the restructuring of the electricity industry in the United States and worldwide. He has worked to design the market structures and market rules by which regional transmission organizations, in various forms, coordinate bid-based markets for energy, ancillary services, and financial transmission rights that allow market participants to hedge congestion costs. Selected papers are available on his website, www.whogan.com. He received his undergraduate degree from the U.S. Air Force Academy and his PhD from UCLA.
Professor Hogan has been actively engaged in the design and improvement of competitive electricity markets in many regions of the United States, as well as around the world, from England to Australia. His activities include designing the market structures and market rules by which regional transmission organizations, in various forms, coordinate bid-based markets for energy, ancillary services, and financial transmission rights. This research is also part of the larger activities on energy policy research at Harvard University through the Environment and Natural Resources Policy Program, Environmental Economics Program, Harvard University Center for the Environment, and the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government.
Shmuel Oren
Shmuel Oren is the Earl J. Isaac Chair Professor in the Science and the Analysis of Decision Making, in the department of Industrial Engineering and Operations Research at the University of California at Berkeley and former Chairman of that department. Over the last ten years he has served as the Berkeley site director of PSerc - a multi-university Power Systems Engineering Research Center sponsored by the National Science Foundation and industry members. He was a co-founder of that center.
He served as a consultant and reviewer of electricity market rules concerning congestion management, ancillary services, settlements and resource adequacy, to the Brazilian Electricity Regulatory Agency (ANEEL), the Polish Transmission company (PSE),the Alberta Energy Utility Board, the Peruvian electricity regulatory commission (OSINERG), the Colombian electricity regulators (CREG) and the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI). For the last six years he has been a Senior Adviser to the Market Oversight Division of Public Utility Commission of Texas (PUCT) and is currently also a consultant to the Energy Division of the California Public Utility Commission (CPUC), the New England ISO, ELCOGEN Colombia and the Alberta Independent System Operator (AESO). Dr. Oren served as an expert witness appearing before FERC on behalf of the Bay Area Rapid Transit and on behalf of PacificCorp. He has been a member of a DOE task force on the National Transmission Grid Study.
Dr. Oren has published extensively on the subjects of numerical optimization, nonlinear pricing and the application of such pricing in the context of telecommunications and electric power, incentive design, bidding, transmission pricing, electricity market restructuring and other related topics. He holds a Ph.D., from Sanford University in Engineering Economic Systems and is a Fellow of the IEEE and of INFORMS.
Hugh Outhred
Hugh Outhred has held academic appointments at the University of New South Wales since 1973 and retired on
30/9/07 from the positions of Presiding Director, Centre for Energy and Environmental Markets and
Associate Professor and Head, Energy Systems Research Group in the School of Electrical Engineering and
Telecommunications. He is now a Professorial Visiting Fellow at UNSW. Hugh Outhred has a BE (Hons1) and a PhD
in Electrical Engineering from the University of Sydney and is a Fellow of the Australian Institute of Energy.
Hugh Outhred was a Fulbright Senior Fellow at the University of California Berkeley, USA in 1993 and has also held
visiting positions at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the USA, the University of Liverpool in the UK,
the Universidad Pontificia Comillas in Spain, Roskilde University Centre in Denmark and Murdoch
University in WA. He has been a member of the Board of the Australian Cooperative Research Centre for
Renewable Energy and an Associate Director of the Centre for Photovoltaic Devices and Systems at UNSW.
He is a member of the CSIRO Energy Flagship Advisory Committee.
Hugh Outhred was a Member of the National Electricity Tribunal (NET) throughout its existence from 1998 to 2006,
when it was replaced by alternative regulatory arrangements. The NET was a quasi-judicial appeal body for
the National Electricity Market, established under the National Electricity Law. He was also a member of the
NSW Licence Compliance Advisory Board (LCAB) throughout its existence from 1997 to 2000. It advised
the NSW parliament on compliance by electricity retailers and distributors with their licence conditions.
Hugh Outhred's main research interests are in the areas of electricity industry restructuring and sustainability. His
current research includes the incorporation of voltage values into electricity market design, the integration of
stochastic, non-storable renewable energy resources into restructured electricity industries, the design of
industry governance and regulatory arrangements and energy sustainability for remote rural communities.
Hugh Outhred has provided advisory and educational services for governments, non-government organisations, the
electricity supply industry and private industry in Australia, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Ireland,
New Zealand, the Philippines, Singapore, Spain, South Korea, Taiwan, the UK and the USA. Since 1988, he
has taught over 70 short courses on electricity industry restructuring in many of the above countries.
In 1985 and 1986 Hugh Outhred worked on secondment to the Energy Authority of New South Wales as a special
adviser on renewable energy and electricity industry restructuring. He was founding Head of the Forecasting
Branch with responsibility for demand forecasting and infrastructure planning for electricity and gas in 1986.
While at the University of California Berkeley in 1993 and 1994, he co-authored a report on electricity
industry restructuring for the California Energy Commission. In 1995 & 1996 he led a project for the
Australian National Grid Management Council that undertook electricity-trading experiments to trial the
proposed National Electricity Market trading rules prior to their implementation. Professor Vernon Smith,
who shared the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2002, was one of Hugh Outhred’s collaborators on this project.
In 2000 Hugh Outhred worked on secondment to Murdoch University, contributing to the development of a new
undergraduate course on renewable energy engineering. In 2001 and 2002 he was seconded to the Australian
Cooperative Research Centre for Renewable Energy as Product Executive, Grid-connected Renewable Energy
Services, to lead a research program on grid-connected renewable energy resources. From 2005 to 2008,
Hugh Outhred has led a UNSW research project for the Australian Greenhouse Office on facilitating the uptake of
wind energy in the Australian electricity industry and in 2008 he is leading a research project for AusAID on
ways to improve the sustainability of energy service delivery for rural communities in Indonesia and China.
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