Since we had just published that article with Thierry’s astounding claims about the future of energy, I knew to watch him closely. It was a giant, packed room and I was in the midst of interviewing a few people, but even if I hadn’t made it a point to keep an ear up for anything he said, I think I wouldn’t have missed his segments. His spunky, energetic voice — which spikes like the notes in Happy (… or pick your tune) — can’t be missed, and the content behind those spikes is more powerful, much more powerful.
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I should probably backtrack a little bit: Engie may be an unfamiliar name to you because the company was called GDF Suez for ~150 years prior to the relatively recent rebranding. The rebranding goes deeper than the name. During a long interview with the fresh (since 2016) head of tech disruption at Engie, I forgot to ask Thierry how much money he has at his fingertips to steer Engie into an even bigger global role in the 21st century. Of course, he probably wouldn’t reveal any precise figures anyway, but who knows — he’s a cleantech journalist’s dream, as he doesn’t act like a big corporate exec, doesn’t position himself like one, and doesn’t seem locked in the conventional handcuffs and mental prison bars that many top executives seem locked in. He’s open, says things he probably “shouldn’t,” and is more than willing to talk about disruption. I couldn’t keep myself from repeatedly thinking about Elon Musk during his presentation and during our interview afterwards. Thierry may or may not be happy with the comparison, but my mind didn’t keep surfacing the Silicon Valley grand wizard of the cleantech world by chance.
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Isabelle Kocher apparently realizes as well that the energy market is at the early phase of a transformation that is bigger than anything since the Industrial Revolution, perhaps even bigger than the Industrial Revolution. Thierry said in his rEVolution presentation that Isabelle has stopped using the term “transition” and favors “revolution.” EV-Box apparently had the foresight (and perhaps the long-term vision) to use the same for its new annual conference. If you’re a regular CleanTechnica reader, you’ve probably made another connection — our conference series is titled the “Cleantech Revolution Tour” (and will be the “Cleantech Freakin’ Revolution Tour” in North America). Maybe it is my own bias because of style, language, or a similar vision — maybe none of us are right — but I think Isabelle, Thierry, and the leaders at their latest acquisition all “get it.” Revolution is just part of that, but it ties into the human element that I focused on during my presentation. (It is not all that surprising to find out — as I did seconds ago — that Thierry actually got a doctorate in Social Sciences, and from the school where I got my graduate degree nonetheless — the University of North Carolina.)
This is not a game of incremental steps, as Thierry emphasized. This is not a game of small moves (even though many the small moves do make both the monster and the hero). The world is changing, and it is changing very fast.
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