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James Bradfield Moody


James Bradfield Moody (born 1976) is Executive Director, Development at the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation. He is also a panel member of the ABC Television show "The New Inventors" and co-author of The Sixth Wave: How to succeed in a resource-limited world with Bianca Nogrady.

From 2004 to 2009, Moody held various roles at CSIRO including General Manager, Government and International, General Manager, International and Director, Divisional Business Strategy for the Division of Land and Water.

Moody also sits on the board of the Brisbane Institute, the Advisory Council of the Australian Bureau of Statistics and is an Australian National Commissioner for UNESCO. He has previously sat on the boards of the National Australia Day Council, the Advisory Board of the Bureau of Meteorology and the Australian Spatial Information Business Association. He was also previously a member of the Federal Government’s National Environmental Education Council and President of Young Engineers Australia.

Moody completed his Doctor of Philosophy in Business Administration/Innovation in 2004 at the Australian National University for research into Complex Product Systems in the Australian National Innovation System focusing on the space industry. He also has a Bachelor of Electrical and Electronic Systems Engineering and a Bachelor of Information Technology from the Queensland University of Technology.

From 2001 to 2003 Moody was the Managing Director of Natural Resource Intelligence (NRI), a spatial information company, and part of the Natural Intelligence (ASX: NAI) group. NAI was reborn in 2004 as Commoditel (ASX: CMO), and again as ComTel (ASX: CMO).

From 1999 to 2001 Moody was responsible for systems engineering of Fedsat, the first Australian Satellite to be launched in thirty years, funded by the Cooperative Research Centre for Satellite Systems (CRCSS). This included working with UK firm Space Innovations Ltd who were sub-contracted to build the satellite bus and assisting in transferring the technology back to Australia.

From 2000 to 2002 Moody was co-facilitator and Australian representative of the youth advisory council to the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP). He was also a founder and co-chair of the Space Generation Advisory Council in support of the UN Programme on Space Applications, a group of students and young space professionals. James was also a member of the Science and Technology delegation to the UN World Summit on Sustainable Development in 2002, was a member and executive secretary of the taskforce on Science and Technology for the Millennium Development Goals and was invited to attend the World Economic Forum as a Global Leader of Tomorrow in 2003 and Young Global Leader in 2005.


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