Profiles
Executive Members
-
- Masayoshi SonFounder and ChairpersonChairman & CEO, SoftBank Group
- Masayoshi Son was born in 1957 in Tosu City of Saga Prefecture, Kyushu, Japan. A year after graduating from the Economics Department of UC Berkeley, Son founded and became Chairman & CEO of SoftBank Corp. Japan (now SoftBank Group Corp.) in 1981. SoftBank Group Corp. went public in 1994, and two years later in 1996, Son launched Yahoo Japan Corporation as a joint venture with Yahoo! Inc. US, running the enterprise first as President & CEO, then became Chairman. In 2001, SoftBank launched the Yahoo! BB broadband ADSL service in partnership with Yahoo Japan Corporation, and later made the high profile acquisition of Vodafone K.K. (now SoftBank Corp.) in April of 2006.
In July 2013, Sprint Corporation joined the SoftBank Group and Son became its Chairman. Currently he retains multiple positions including Chairman & CEO of SoftBank Group Corp. and Director of Yahoo Japan Corporation. Son is also known as the owner of the Fukuoka SoftBank HAWKS (a Japanese professional baseball team based in Kyushu).
After the Great East Japan Earthquake on March 11, 2011, he founded and assumed chairmanship of Renewable Energy Institute to promote the use of renewable energy.
-
- Kiyoshi KurokawaCouncil MemberProfessor Emeritus, the University of Tokyo and National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies
Distinguished Professor of Tokai University
Chairman, Health and Global Policy Institute - Kiyoshi Kurokawa is a physician, a graduate of the University of Tokyo, School of Medicine; spent in USA 1969-84; was professor of medicine at UCLA, University of Tokyo, Dean Tokai University Medical School, President of the Science Council of Japan (03-06), and Science Advisor to the Prime Minister of Japan (06-08). He is Vice Chair of the World Dementia Council established by G8 Summit in 2013 by UK and serves as Chair of the Covid-19 AI Advisory Board since July 2020. He was Chair of the National Diet of Japan Fukushima Nuclear Accident Independent Investigation Commission (NAIIC; Dec.2011-July 2012) and received "2012 Scientific Freedom and Responsibility Award" of AAAS and "100 Top Global Thinkers 2012" of 'Foreign Policy' for his leadership in NAIIC.
- Kiyoshi KurokawaCouncil MemberProfessor Emeritus, the University of Tokyo and National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies
-
- Naohiko JinnoCouncil MemberProfessor Emeritus, University of Tokyo
Member of Representative Board, Japan Finance Organization for Municipalities - After graduating in Economics from the University of Tokyo in 1969, Naohiko Jinno joined Nissan Motor Co. then went on to complete his Masters degree in Economics at the University of Tokyo in 1978, followed by his doctorate in 1981, specializing in public finance and local government finance. His career includes serving as assistant professor at Osaka City University, professor at the graduate school of Tokyo University, professor at Kansei Gakuin University, and chairman of the Local Public Finance Council. He currently serves as emeritus professor at The University of Tokyo. He also serves on many committees and advisory councils, including as Acting Chairperson of the Tax Commission, Chairman of the Pension Subcommittee of the Social Security Council, and Chairman of the Advisory Council on Decentralization Reform.
Among his recent publications are the works Wakachiai no Keizaigaku (“The Economics of Sharing”), Iwanami Shinsho, and Zeikin Jōshiki no Uso (“Inaccuracies").
- Naohiko JinnoCouncil MemberProfessor Emeritus, University of Tokyo
-
- Naoko IshiiCouncil MemberSpecial Presidential Envoy for Global Commons, Professor at Institute for Future Initiatives, Director for Center for Global Commons, the University of Tokyo
- Naoko Ishii is the Special Presidential Envoy for Global Commons at the University of Tokyo and a Professor at UTokyo's Institute for Future Initiatives. She is also the inaugural Director of the Center for Global Commons (CGC), which is dedicated to achieving sustainable development within planetary boundaries. She firmly believes that academia can play a pivotal role in mobilizing movements alongside policy makers, businesses, and civil society to ensure responsible stewardship of the global commons and a stable earth system. Under her vision, CGC collaborates internationally on sustainability initiatives and spearhead projects with Japanese businesses on energy transition, food systems, and circular economy.
Previously, Naoko led the Global Environment Facility (GEF) as CEO and chairperson (2012-2020), leading transformation of key economic systems for sustainability. Her career includes positions at Japan's Ministry of Finance, most recently, as Deputy Vice Minister, and at the World Bank and IMF.
She is currently a Board member of UN Foundation, ClimateWorks Foundation, Emergent, a member of the Advisory Board of Capitals Coalition, EAT Foundation, and the Steering Committee of Global Commons Alliance. Naoko holds a Ph.D. from the University of Tokyo and has authored several books, two of which have won academic awards.
-
- Takeshi KobayashiCouncil MemberMusician
Representative Director, ap bank - Takeshi Kobayashi has produced numerous artists since the 1980s, including popular bands known as “Southern All Stars” and “Mr. Children.” After the 1990s, he became active in film and music, crossing genre boundaries, as represented by the creative collaboration works such as “Swallowtail” and “All About Lily Chou-Chou.” In 2003, he founded 'ap bank' with Kazutoshi Sakurai of Mr. Children and Ryuichi Sakamoto, and has initiated various projects for establishing a sustainable system with renewable energy and food recycling, as well as helping reconstruction and recovery from the Great East Japan Earthquake. He is the production and executive committee chairperson of the Reborn-Art Festival, an art festival launched with the aim of revitalizing the disaster affected regions of the Great East Japan Earthquake.
- Takeshi KobayashiCouncil MemberMusician
-
- Tomas KåbergerChair of Executive BoardProfessor, Chalmers University of Technology
- Tomas Kåberger has been the Chair of Executive Board of Renewable Energy Institute since its foundation in 2011.
Academically, he got an MSc in Engineering Physics, a PhD in Physical Resource Theory, and Docent in Environmental
Science at Chalmers. He has been professor in International Sustainable Energy Systems at the International Institute
for Industrial Environmental Economics at Lund University, and he is currently affiliate Professor of Industrial Energy
Policy at Chalmers University of Technology.
Industrially, he has had leading roles in companies providing fuels and technology in the bio-energy industry, another company developing sustainable energy solutions for the automotive industry, and a company operating wind power plants. Currently he serves on the board of Persson Invest, a company building wind and solar plants and a retailer of cars, trucks and busses; increasingly electric. He is also the Chairman of the Swedish Delegation for a Circular Economy.
He has served as Director General of the National Swedish Energy Agency, Board of Director of the power company Vattenfall, and as member of the Swedish Climate Policy Council.
Other key positions he has held include board of the Swedish and European environmental citizens organizations, government committees and commissions on energy and environmental policy in Sweden, as well as member task forces under China International Council for Cooperation on Environment and Development.
He is a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Engineering Sciences and the Swedish Society of Energy Economists.
-
- Takejiro SueyoshiVice-Chair of Executive BoardSpecial Advisor to UNEP Finance Initiative in the Asia Pacific Region
- After graduating from University of Tokyo, Takejiro Sueyoshi joined the Mitsubishi Bank (MUFG Bank, Ltd.) in 1967 and worked for the bank until 1998.
During his years with Nikko Asset Management as Deputy President, he was appointed as a member of the UNEP FI Steering Committee. In addition to the involvement in the UNEP FI activities in the Asia Pacific Region, he is giving many educational speeches about environmental problems and CSR/SRI in various government councils, seminars, universities and TV programs. Former member of the Council for Japan’s Prime Minister on Climate Change Policy, a Trustee member of Carbon Disclosure Project and Chairperson of WWF Japan since September 2018.
His publications include “Ondanka Kogi (A lecture on Global Warming)” (Toyo Keizai), “Yugai Rensa (Chain of Harmfulness)” (Gentousha), “Green New Deal” (Editor,Kankyou Shinbun), “Saishin CSR Jijyo( The Newest Book on CSR)”(Hokuseido).
-
- Teruyuki OhnoExecutive DirectorTeruyuki Ohno joined Renewable Energy Institute in 2013. He has actively participated in the policy formation of Japan’s climate change measures as a member of national and local governments' committees. Before joining the Institute, he was Director General of the Bureau of Environment, Tokyo Metropolitan Government for three years, covering a broad range of environmental issues including energy, climate change, waste management, pollution control, natural environment, and sustainable development. His notable achievements include the “No Dirty Diesel Vehicle Strategy in Tokyo” which reduced the air pollution and PM emissions, and implementation of Japan’s first Cap-and-Trade Program in Tokyo in 2008, involving the industries and successfully building a grand consensus. His active leadership in promoting renewable energy and energy efficiency led to the formation of the foundation of Tokyo’s energy policy. He is also a Board Member of WWF Japan. He received the Haagen-Smit Clean Air Award from the California Air Resources Board in 2014. His publications include "Energy Strategies of Municipality Governments" (Iwanami, 2013, Japanese) among others.
-
- Amory B. LovinsBoard MemberCo-founder, Chief Scientist and Chairman Emeritus, Rocky Mountain Institute
- For more than 4 decades, Amory B. Lovins has been advising about the nexus of energy, resources, environment, development, and security in more than 50 countries including the U.S. Departments of Energy and Defense. He is widely considered among the world’s leading authorities on energy—especially its efficient use and sustainable supply—and a fertile innovator in integrative design. He has published more than 30 books and 470 papers, and won numerous awards including the Right Livelihood Award (the “Alternative Nobel”) , the Onassis Foundation’s first Delphi Prize (one of the world’s top environmental awards), the Nissan Prize, the Blue Planet Prize, and the Shingo Prize (Nobel –like prize in Manufacturing). In 2009, Time named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world, and Foreign Policy one of the 100 top global thinkers. His 31st book with a large RMI team, Reinventing Fire (2011, also in Japanese), roadmaps how to eliminate U.S. oil, coal, and nuclear power by 2050 and save $5 trillion, led by business for profit. In 2013–16 he co-led a similarly rigorous and surprising roadmapping of China’s energy transformation for the National Development and Reform Commission, helping to inform the 13th Five Year Plan. In 2016, the President of Germany awarded him that nation’s highest civilian honor for helping inspire and guide its energy transition.
-
- Dörte FouquetBoard MemberLawyer/Partner, Becker Büttner Held
- Dörte Fouquet leads the Brussels office of the law firm Becker Büttner Held (BBH) since January 2011. With more than 30 years of experience, she is a recognized international expert in the areas of energy, environmental and competition law. She is a trusted expert partner of the European institutions. Her client base includes government authorities, non-profit organisations, academic institutions and private companies. She is also Director of the European Renewable Energies Federation (EREF), thus constantly working with renewable energy associations on national and European level.
-
- Hiroko KuniyaBoard MemberJournalist
- From 1989 to 1993, Hiroko Kuniya was assigned as an anchor of “World News” on NHK BS. She hosted “Close-up Gendai”, a daily current affairs program on NHK-TV from 1993 to 2016. She is a Trustee of Tokyo University of the Arts, a Specially Appointed Professor of Keio University Graduate School, FAO National Goodwill Ambassador for Japan and worked as a journalist covering topics related to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Awarded Broadcast Woman Prize in 1998, Kan KIKUCHI Award in 2002, Japan National Press Club Prize in 2011 and Galaxy Special Prize in 2016. She graduated from Brown University, US.
-
- Toru MorotomiBoard MemberProfessor, Graduate School of Economics, Faculty of Economics, Kyoto University
- Toru Morotomi graduated from Doshisha University with a B.A. in Economics in 1993, and completed the doctoral program at
the Graduate School of Economics, Kyoto University in 1998. He has been associate professor at the Faculty of Economics
in Yokohama National University, and at the Graduate School of Economics, the School of Government, and at the Graduate
School of Economics in Kyoto University before assuming his current position in March 2010.
His major publications include "Theory and Practice of Environmental Taxes" (Yuhikaku, 2000), "Environment: Frontier of Thinking" (Iwanami Shoten, 2003) among others on tax and economy. He is co-author of "Road to Low Carbon Economy" (Iwanami Shinsho, 2010), "Decarbonizing Society and Policy Mix" (Nippon Hyoron Sha, 2010), "Japanese Electricity Market Liberalization and Renewable Energy" (Nippon Hyoron Sha, editor and author, 2015), "Renewable Energy and Regional Development" (Nippon Hyoron Sha, editor and author, 2015), "An Introductory Guide to to Renewable Energy and the Electric Power System” (Nippon Hyoron Sha, editor and author, 2019), among others.
He has served on numerous government and municipal committees, as ad-hoc member of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry's "Advisory Committee for Natural Resources and Energy," member of the Ministry of the Environment's joint subcommittee of the Central Environment Council's “Experts Committee on Environmental Taxation," member of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government's "Environment Council," member of the Ministry of the Environment's "Experts Committee on Policy Design of Domestic Emissions Trading System," member of the Asahi Shimbun's "Book Review Committee," an ad-hoc member of the Ministry of the Environment's "Central Environment Council," and an affiliate member of the 25th Science Council of Japan.
-
- Kiyoshi MatsuoAuditorCPA, Matsuo Kiyoshi Accounting Office
- Kiyoshi Matsuo joined Price Waterhouse (currently PricewaterhouseCoopers) in 1977 and registered as a CPA in 1982. He transferred to the New York office of the company in 1986. In 1992, he became a partner and worked as representative of Japanese corporation department. In 1996, he joined New York office of Tohmatsu (currently Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu LLC) and was assigned to the Tokyo Office in 2000. After experiencing several managerial positions, he became Head of Global Service Department in 2010. In 2013 he established Matsuo Kiyoshi Accounting Office and has been working as representative since then.