Leonardo Maugeri

      Maugeri Leonardo
      Leonardo Maugeri.jpg
      Born (1964-04-10) 10 April 1964 (age 49)
      Florence, Italy
      Nationality Italy Italian
      Occupation Oil businessman

      Leonardo Maugeri has been one of the most distinguished top managers of Eni (the giant Italian giant oil&gas, ranked 6th among the largest international oil companies), where he held the positions of Senior Executive Vice President of Strategies and Development for about ten years (2000–2010), and eventually Executive Chairman of Polimeri Europa, Eni’s petrochemical branch (March 2010-June 2011). Maugeri is also well-recognized worldwide for his books and seminal articles about energy, as well as for his part-time activity as a lecturer in some of the most prestigious universities and think-tanks.

      On August 31, 2011, he left Eni for a sabbatical period.

      He is currently a Senior Fellow at Harvard University, John Kennedy School, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

      Born in Florence, Italy, in 1964, Mr. Maugeri holds two degrees (Political Science and Economics) and a Ph.D. in international economics.[1] During his Ph.D. research, he specialized in energy economics in Great Britain and the United States, where he lived and worked as an energy financial analyst for two years.

      He joined eni in 1994, and served as assistant to the Chief Executive Officer from 1995 to 1998. From 1999 to 2000 he was responsible for Strategic Studies and International Relations,holding at the same time the position of Chief Economist of the company.

      In 2000, at the age of 36, he was appointed as head of Strategies and Development, becoming the youngest Director (and Senior Vice President) of eni in 30 years. His portfolio encompassed planning and control, strategic development, chief economist, competitive intelligence, international and public affairs.

      In his rapid and distinguished career at eni, he was a key in several moments of the company’s life. In particular, he was one of the key architects of the strategy of aggressive growth of eni launched in 1999. In particular, he prepared for the then CEO the Master Plan on which eni based its new strategy – the reason why he was eventually appointed Senior Executive Vice President (Director) of Strategies and Development in 2000. Thanks to that strategy, eni production of oil&gas increased by 60% in just five years.

      In 2006, his portfolio increased with the responsibility of Research and Technological Innovation. This new duty allowed Maugeri to be the main architect of the new policy of R&D launched by eni in 2006, which opened up the company’s entry into renewable energy. In this framework, Maugeri promoted the strategic alliance between Eni and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2008, which – among other outcomes - led to the establishment of the Eni-MIT Solar Frontiers Center in 2010.

      Maugeri was also responsible for the relaunch of the prestigious “Donegani Institute” – Eni’smain research laboratory of Eni, a forerunner of chemistry innovation in Europe. Under Maugeri’s leadership, the Institute changed its mission and became Eni’s leading center for R&D on the new frontiers of energy technology innovation.

      In March 2010, Maugeri was then appointed Chairman of Polimeri Europa, eni’s petrochemical branch, with the main task to dramatically renew its strategy after two years (2008 and 2009) of huge losses (overall, around 900 billion euro). Since April 2010, the company started to recover and in the third quarter it registered o positive operating and net profit. At the same time, he devised a new and revolutionary strategy for the company, which was presented to and approved by the Eni Board on October 28, 2010.

      As a leading author on energy, he was among the few who warned about a probable crash of oil prices after the sky-high levels achieved in 2008. He has publishedfour books on energy, among them the “The Age of Oil: the Mythology, History, and Future of the World’s Most Controversial Resource” (Praeger, 2006), which earned the Choice Price in the U.S. in 2007 and was translated into 11 languages. His latest book – “Beyond the Age of Oil: The Myths and Realities of Fossil Fuels and Their Alternatives” was published in the U.S. in March 2010 (so far, it has been translated into six languages).

      Mr. Maugeri has also written several articles which appeared in Foreign Affairs,[2] Science, Newsweek International, The Wall Street Journal,[3]Forbes,[4] the Oil & Gas Journal and Scientific American.[5]

      Mr. Maugeri has been a Visiting Scholar of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT, 2009–2010), and amember of MIT’s External Energy Advisory Board. He also serves as an International Councilor of the Center for Strategic and International Studies (Washington, D.C.), asa member of the Global Energy Advisory Board of Accenture, and he is a senior fellow of the Foreign Policy Association (New York).

      Books (in english)

      • The Age of Oil: The Mythology, History, and Future of the World's Most Controversial Resource. USA, Praeger Publishers, June 2006.
      • Beyond the Age of Oil: The Myths, Realities, and Future of Fossil Fuels and Their Alternatives.(US) Preager, February 2010.
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      Selected Articles and Brief Essays (in English 2003-2009)

      • Beyond the Age of Oil: The Myths, Realities, and Future of Fossil Fuels and Their Alternatives (Praeger, February 26, 2010)
      • Peak Oil ? Not This Century (The Daily Telegraph, November 10, 2009)
      • The Crude Truth About Oil Reserves (The Wall Street Journal Europe, November 5, 2009)[6]
      • Squeezing More Oil From the Ground (Scientific American, October 2009)[7]
      • Understanding oil Price Behaviour Through the Anatomy of a Crisis (The Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, Summer 2009)[8]
      • What Lies Beneath ? (Newsweek Intl. Special Edition, December 2006-February 2007)
      • That Falling Feeling (Newsweek Intl., October 9, 2006)
      • Oil, Oil Everywhere (Forbes, July 24, 2006)[4]
      • Two Cheers For Expensive Oil (Foreign Affairs, March–April, 2006)[9]
      • The Saudis May Have Enough Oil (Newsweek Intl., January 23, 2006)
      • The Price is Wrong (Newsweek Intl., 6 September 2004)
      • The Virgin Oilfields of Iraq (Newsweek Intl., 5 July 2004)
      • Oil, Never Cry Wolf: Why the Petroleum Age Is Far from Over (Science, 21–27 May 2004)[10]
      • The Shell Game (Newsweek Intl., 16 February 2004)
      • Time to Debunk Mythical Links Between Oil and Politics (Oil & Gas Journal, 15 December 2003)
      • The Fallacies of Energy Security (Energy Compass, 19 September 2003)
      • Not in Oil’s Name (Foreign Affairs, July–August 2003)
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      References

      1. ^ [1][dead link]
      2. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo (2003-07-01). "Not in Oil's Name". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      3. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo (2009-11-04). "Leonardo Maugeri: The Crude Truth About Oil Reserves - WSJ.com". Online.wsj.com. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      4. ^ a b "Oil, Oil Everywhere". Forbes.com. 2006-10-27. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      5. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo. "Leonardo Maugeri". Scientific American. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      6. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo (2009-11-04). "Leonardo Maugeri: The Crude Truth About Oil Reserves - WSJ.com". Online.wsj.com. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      7. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo. "Squeezing More Oil Out of the Ground". Scientific American. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      8. ^ Leonardo Maugeri (2009-06-28). "Understanding Oil Price Behavior through an Analysis of a Crisis". Rev Environ Econ Policy 3 (2): 147–166. doi:10.1093/reep/rep007. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      9. ^ Maugeri, Leonardo (2006-03-01). "Two Cheers for Expensive Oil". Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
      10. ^ Leonardo Maugeri. "Oil: Never Cry Wolf-Why the Petroleum Age Is Far from over". Science. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
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      External links

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      Last modified on 24 February 2013, at 09:42