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Giulio Boccaletti


Giulio Boccaletti, Ph.D., (born in Modena, Italy) is the British-Italian Chief Strategy Officer and Global Managing Director for Water at The Nature Conservancy. Trained as a physicist and atmospheric scientist, Boccaletti currently sits on the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council, and has served on the OECD-WWC High Level Panel on Infrastructure Financing for a Water-Secure World.

An alumnus of MIT, Princeton and Bologna universities, Boccaletti was briefly a lead author of the fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and contributes to the ideas platform published by the Edge Foundation, Inc.

The Nature Conservancy

Boccaletti joined The Nature Conservancy (TNC) in February 2013. In his role as Chief Strategy Officer, he works with other members of the Executive Team to develop the organization’s strategy and apply economic and scientific practice to its conservation agenda. Likewise, as the organization's Global Managing Director for Water, Boccaletti leads a team of over 200 freshwater scientists, policy experts, economists and on-the-ground conservation practitioners. He promotes action on water issues by governments and businesses.

McKinsey

In 2005 Boccaletti joined McKinsey & Company where he became a partner. He co-founded the water practice and worked with businesses and governments all over the world. He co-authored the “Charting Our Water Security” report, one of the first to address the question of global water scarcity through multilateral, private-public collaboration defining a cost-curve for investment in water infrastructure.

MIT

In September 2003 Boccaletti joined the Department of Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he specialized in geophysical fluid dynamics and climate science. His research focused on the dynamics of large-scale oceanic flows.Boccaletti, G.; Ferrari, R.; Adcroft, A.; Ferreira, D.; Marshall, J. (2005). "The vertical structure of ocean heat transport". Geophysical Research Letters. MIT. 32: L10603. doi:10.1029/2005GL022474. 


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Wikipedia

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