
My job is a perfect mixture of creativity, optimism, and economic reality. Every day I have the pleasure of looking for business opportunities and strategies that will add value to the company and, hopefully, contribute to our nation's growing renewable energy capacity.
-- Chase Whitney '02
Chase Whitney '02
Chase Whitney '02 is a business developer for Iberdrola Renewables, the world's largest owner and operator of wind energy facilities. Whitney majored in Environmental Studies and History at Cornell and now lives in Denver, Colo.
What does your job
entail?
My job is to advance wind energy projects
from varying stages of development to construction and operation. Some of these
projects are early in the development process, and others are just a matter of
months from construction. In the earliest stages, it is my responsibility to
create and identify new project opportunities and begin the process of securing
development rights. As the project matures, I ensure that all necessary legal
agreements have been completed, all permits have been secured from
participating authorities, and the project has received internal corporate
approval.
What do you like most
about your job?
I pursued a job in the renewable energy
industry with an environmental motive and an appreciation for the power of
markets. My job is a perfect mixture of creativity, optimism, and economic
reality. Every day I have the pleasure of looking for business opportunities
and strategies that will add value to the company and, hopefully, contribute to
our nation's growing renewable energy capacity. Equally pleasing is the fact
that these opportunities need to be economically viable to succeed.
Any future plans?
My future plans have
me staying in the energy sector and identifying profitable opportunities to
address the myriad of challenges our society will face in the coming decades. As
the pressures of limited fossil energy supplies, a growing population in both
size and affluence, and environmental degradation begin to collide, the world
will need to adapt and embrace new technologies and systems that work to align
our economic goals with a finite world.
What was best about
studying at Cornell?
Cornell provides
students with the opportunity to immerse themselves in a variety of topics and
to develop a passion for learning that may be more elusive in a larger and more
traditional academic setting. My majors -- U.S. History and Environmental
Studies -- offered classes that made it practically impossible not to be
engaged. There were geology classes in the Bahamas and New Zealand that
provided a broader understanding of the natural world and history classes that
illustrated the effectiveness of pragmatic and enlightened leadership.
Any notable
experiences as a student?
I took every
available opportunity to participate in off-campus study. The ability of the
OCAAT schedule to incorporate off-campus destinations is invaluable and one of
the reasons I decided to attend Cornell. Over the course of four years, I took
courses that traveled to Washington D.C., Chicago, the Florida Keys, and the
Bahamas. I remained involved even after graduation and attended a geology class
in New Zealand for a month.
Cornell is absolutely unique in its ability to incorporate tangible experience into the traditional classroom. Whether it be meeting a Supreme Court Justice during a course on Government and Politics, or in one glance seeing two coral reefs, one submerged and the other on the beach, to illustrate past climate change, Cornell has the ability to illuminate a subject unlike any other institution.