ANTHOFFLAB.BERKELEY.EDU - Key Persons


Alex Dolginow

Job Titles:
  • Master

Anaya Hall

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Anaya is a PhD student in the Energy and Resources Group (ERG) at UC Berkeley. Prior to joining ERG, Anaya attended the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University where she earned a Master of Science in Agriculture, Food and Environment and a Certificate in Water Systems. As an InFEWS and DS421 Fellow, she is interested in using quantitative spatial analysis to investigate multiscale dynamics of critical environmental and resource concerns at the nexus of agriculture, water and energy. At ERG she hopes to build on her interdisciplinary background, linking ecological and economic sciences to promote equitable, sustainable, and climate-resilient food systems. Anaya holds a B.A. in Human Biology from Stanford University. She enjoys hiking, gardening and sharing meals with friends.

Anna Yip

Job Titles:
  • Masters Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2019 - 2021 )

Catherina Ledna

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2017 - 2020 )

Cecilia Han Springer

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2014 - 2019 )

Clayton Munnings

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Clayton Munnings is a graduate student with the Energy Resources Group and the West Coast Representative of the International Emissions Trading Association. His research interests focus on the design, implementation, and assessment of climate policies including carbon pricing, carbon offsets, and carbon neutrality. Clayton came to Berkeley from a career in climate policy, recently serving as an economist in the Executive Office of the California Air Resources Board. Before that, he spent five years as a Senior Research Associate at Resources for the Future leading research projects and authoring over two dozen academic articles and issue briefs on carbon pricing in the United States, China, and Europe. Clayton operates his own consultancy and serves on the board of Earthshot Now, a non-profit creating a virtual reality video game about climate change. He holds a B.S. in Science of Natural and Environmental Systems with Research Honors in Applied Economics from Cornell University.

Cody Warner

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Cody is an MA student in the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley. Cody's primary motivation is to minimize emissions in the electricity sector that harm our society and environment. As a research assistant with the Electricity Markets and Policy Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Cody also studies the impact of variable renewable energy on electricity markets. Most recently, he modeled the future of retail electricity pricing in the context of high penetration levels of variable renewable energy. Prior to his graduate work, Cody was a Senior Research Analyst at The Brattle Group in San Francisco. In one of his projects at Brattle, Cody built econometric models that detected elevated rates of birth abnormalities and cancer incidence rates in areas exposed to PFC contamination. The State of Minnesota v. 3M Co resulted in a $850m settlement, the largest environmental lawsuit in the history of Minnesota. Cody earned a Bachelor's degree in Economics and Environmental Policy from Northwestern University.

Cora Kingdon

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Cora is interested in modeling the impacts of climate change on ecosystems around the world, and estimating these impacts for humans in welfare terms. She is also interested in how we can better manage and maintain ecosystems for carbon sequestration and adaptation to climate impacts. Prior to ERG, Cora worked on integrated assessment modeling as part of the Social Cost of Carbon Initiative at Resources for the Future in Washington DC. She holds a BS in Environmental Economics from UC Berkeley.

David Anthoff

Job Titles:
  • Associate Professor, Energy and Resources Group
  • Environmental Economist
  • ERG Associate Professor
Bio: David Anthoff is an environmental economist who studies climate change and environmental policy. He co-develops the integrated assessment model FUND that is used widely in academic research and in policy analysis. His research has appeared in Nature, Science, the American Economic Review, Nature Climate Change, the Journal of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists and other academic journals. He contributed a background research paper to the Stern Review and has advised numerous organizations (including US EPA and the Canadian National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy) on the economics of climate change.

Eli Lazarus

Job Titles:
  • Ecological Economist
Bio: Eli is an Ecological Economist, investigating non-market value and externalities using mulitple tools and frameworks in order to address the most profound problems we face as a species such as climate change. He is currently working on open-source Computable General Equilibrium (CGE) modelling. Eli holds a Masters of Science in Energy and Resources and graduated summa cum laude in Economics from San Francisco State University. Eli worked for several years as a Research Scientist maintaining and developing the Ecological Footprint with the non-profit think tank, Global Footprint Network. He was the production and development lead on both a material-flow and multi region input output based model for the Ecological Footprint of all nations. Eli is from Australia and likes sailing.

Esther Shears

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Esther researches how climate change will impact the financial sector and how the private sector and regulatory agencies are responding to climate-related financial risks. She is interested in the assessment and valuation of these risks, as well as the extent to which pre-competitive collaboration among firms can advance sustainability and climate-conscious efforts. Esther recently completed a concurrent MS-MPP program within ERG and the Goldman School of Public Policy, for which she examined how the commercialization of Landsat's satellite imagery impacted the progress of academic research worldwide. Prior to beginning her graduate studies at UC Berkeley, she worked for the U.S. Department of Justice as a statistician in the Economic Analysis Group of the Antitrust Division. Esther holds an honors BA degree in Economics from Occidental College where she studied industrial organization and the connection between financial markets in emerging economies and the development of renewable energy sectors.

Frances Moore

Job Titles:
  • Ciriacy - Wantrup Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics ( 2015 - 2016 )

Frank Errickson

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2014 - 2020 )

Gabriela Michalek

Job Titles:
  • Visiting PhD Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2015 )

Giacomo Marangoni

Job Titles:
  • Visiting PhD Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2015 )

Hélène Benveniste

Job Titles:
  • Visiting PhD Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2018 )

James Rising

Job Titles:
  • Ciriacy - Wantrup Postdoctoral Fellow, Energy and Resources Group ( 2015 - 2017 )

Johannes Emmerling

Job Titles:
  • Visiting Researcher, Energy and Resources Group ( 2014 )

Karina Snow French

Job Titles:
  • Masters Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2019 - 2021 )

Kevin Kaushal

Job Titles:
  • Visiting PhD Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2016 - 2017 )

Leonie Wenz

Job Titles:
  • Ciriacy - Wantrup Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics ( 2018 - 2019 )

Lisa Rennels

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Lisa is interested in using computer science to explore issues related to the economic impacts of climate change, and to support research and policy-making in this area. She currently works on software development of the Mimi package to support the construction and use of integrated assessment models, as well as uncertainty analysis and sensitivity analysis. Her Master's project work focused on global sensitivity analysis as applied to integrated assessment models. She spent the three years previous to ERG working at an environmental consulting firm called Industrial Economics Inc. where she leveraged data analysis, computer programming, and GIS to work on projects related to the economic affects of climate change, specifically those related to water resources, and assist policy-makers in planning paths forward. She has a B.A. from Dartmouth College in Environmental Studies, focused on environmental economics, and a Post-Baccalaureate Computer Science Minor from Tufts University.

Liyang Wang

Job Titles:
  • Masters Student, Energy and Resources Group

Michelle Levinson

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2016 - 2019 )

Nica Campbell

Job Titles:
  • Master Student at Energy & Resource Group
Bio: Nica's primary interests lie in probing pathways for circular economy by examining the social costs behind supply chains and enhancing market transparency. She is a researcher for a Grantham foundation creating a measurement to evaluate carbon capturing technologies to enhance effective investment for decarbonizing the energy market. Prior to joining ERG, Nica worked in corporate finance in Japan and the UK. She holds an Environmental Economics & Policy BS degree with honors from UC Berkeley.

Priyanka Mohanty

Job Titles:
  • Masters Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Priyanka is a second-year Masters of Science Student with the Energy and Resources Group. At ERG, she works on a variety of issues including the identification and quantification of the economic benefits of just transition policies and explore issues at the nexus of international economic development and climate action. While at ERG, she works at the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab International Energy Division and the Governor's Office of Planning and Research where she has developed a specialization in the technologies and policies required to decarbonize the transport sector. Prior to coming to ERG, she worked with the New Climate Economy (NCE), a major international initiative housed within the World Resource Institute and governed by the Global Commission on the Economy and Climate. At NCE, she provided research support for their flagship 2018 global report "Unlocking the Inclusive Growth Story of the 21st Century: Accelerating Climate Action in Urgent Times", authored research briefings on climate finance for the 2018 G7 meetings, and managed the project's country portfolios in China, India and Indonesia, working with high level stakeholders and government agencies to help implement a low-carbon development policy agenda.

Ryan Andresen

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio: Ryan is a graduate student at Energy & Resources Group and an analyst at the Pubic Advocates Office at the CPUC. He works to ensure that utility wildfire costs are reasonable, prudent, and reduce the risk of wildfires. Ryan takes an energy economics approach to consider electricity restructuring and reducing the impacts of wildfires from electric utility infrastructure in California. He received a B.S. in Environmental Economics and Policy from UC Berkeley in 2020.

Sangcheol Moon

Job Titles:
  • Student, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, and Management

Stephen Jarvis

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2015 - 2020 )

Valeri Vasquez

Job Titles:
  • Student, Energy and Resources Group
Bio:Váleri N. Vásquez is a doctoral candidate in the Energy and Resources Group. She develops and applies mathematical models to study the environmental drivers and economic impacts of infectious disease. Váleri's research is particularly focused on the use of genetic-based interventions to control mosquito-borne illness and has been recognized by numerous fellowships and grants, including from Microsoft Research and the Berkeley Institute for Data Science. Before graduate school Váleri concentrated on climate change issues at the U.S. Department of State, serving on the senior team to shape the Paris Agreement.

Will Gorman

Bio: Will is a graduate student in the Energy and Resources Group at UC Berkeley and a researcher in the Electricity Markets and Policy Group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His research focuses on the economics of distributed energy resources, the integration of variable generation into the electric power system, and the impact of autonomous and electric vehicles on energy systems. Previously, he worked with the utilities practice at The Brattle Group, an economic consulting firm, where I focused on electricity market and retail rate design. He holds a B.S. in Chemical Engineering and a B.A. in Plan II Honors from the University of Texas at Austin.

Wolfgang Habla

Job Titles:
  • Visiting PhD Student, Energy and Resources Group ( 2014 )