T'09
Pace Ralli
co-founder and CEO, Clean Marine Energy
Pace Ralli was on a ski lift when he and an old friend hatched a plan to transform the shipping industry. Ralli had been working in energy finance, helping to launch an energy-efficiency financing fund for real estate; his friend Volckert van Reesema was in the shipping business.
“Volckert had a ship that was facing new emissions regulations and asked if he could use the fund I was working on to invest in efficiency of the ship,” says Ralli, who soon recognized the tremendous opportunity in cleaning up one of the world’s most polluting industries. The friends are now partners in Clean Marine Energy, which Ralli describes as a one-stop shop for financing the conversion of oceangoing cargo ships to run on Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) rather than heavy fuel oil, which is highly polluting.
“Nitrous oxide emissions from the top 15 of the world’s 100,000 ships equal the emissions from every car on the planet,” Ralli says, and childhood asthma rates in U.S. port cities are three times the national average.
A new global emissions-limiting protocol that goes into effect in 2020 will force shipping companies to switch from heavy fuel oil to cleaner-burning fuels. Low-sulfur diesel meets the new standard but it’s expensive. Natural gas is cleaner, cheaper and more abundant than ever. Existing ship engines run just fine on LNG, but there’s a catch: It has to be stored at -270 degrees Fahrenheit. Converting ships to run on LNG will save ship owners money in the long term, but the up-front costs are substantial and fueling infrastructure will have to be developed in hundreds of ports around the world. “It’s a huge undertaking,” Ralli says. “It involves not only creating a market, but the infrastructure to service it.”
Ralli came to Tuck after the 2003 blackout inspired a career change from corporate finance to energy. “The entire eastern seaboard was without power for three days,” he says. “I didn’t know exactly what solution I wanted to be a part of, but I knew there was one out there that I could have a big impact on.” At Tuck he helped start the Dartmouth Energy Collaborative, a student-led precursor to the Revers Center, then went to work at PG&E to gain a broad overview of the energy industry. He followed a mentor to the efficiency startup, where he built financial instruments to mitigate risk and drive energy efficiency investment in the real estate sector. When he and Van Reesema spoke that day on the ski lift, the basic model was established. Still, it’s not easy to sell change in the conservative shipping industry.
“Our strategy is to remove the risk by applying our financial engineering, our technical expertise, and our shipbuilding background, so that LNG fueling looks like something a traditional infrastructure fund normally invests in,” Ralli says. “That enables us to attract the very large dollars that are needed.”
Continue Reading
Related Stories
Using Private Capital to Address Climate Change: Meet Pooja Yadav T’18
From her work with the Biden administration to her role at Azarine, Pooja Yadav T’18 focuses on impact investing to help families build commercial portfolios that achieve significant climate and social outcomes.
Read MoreBattery Systems and the Power Grid: Meet Joshua Hotvet T’18
Joshua Hotvet T’18 shares how innovations in battery technology will enhance power grid efficiency.
Read MoreHow AI will revolutionize real estate’s approach to climate change: Meet Jessica Francisco T’09
Jessica Francisco T’09 explains how AI can enhance data collection in real estate to allow more time focused on carrying out sustainability initiatives.
Read MoreUpgrading the U.S. power grid: Meet Anna Foglesong D’02, T’08
In her role at the Clean Grid Initiative, Anna Foglesong D’02, T’08 focuses on securing funding for high-voltage transmission towers to expand the electric grid’s capacity and allow more renewable energies to connect.
Read MoreSustainable Infrastructure Investing, for Impact: Meet Dan Revers T’89
A conversation with Dan Revers T’89, founder and managing director of ArcLight Capital and founder of Tuck’s Revers Center for Energy, Sustainability, and Innovation.
Read More“Driving” Sustainability: Meet Yumi Otsuka T’07
T’07 Yumi Otsuka reflects on the green initiatives in Toyota’s production around the globe.
Read MoreSHOWING UP: Meet Julia Matthews T’09
From educational reform to physical fitness and mental well-being, Julia Matthews T’09 has built a career in social impact. Now, as VP of ESG strategy at Peloton, she has discovered a new lever for change.
Read MoreLess Waste, Longer Use: Meet Nike’s Peggy Reid T’98
Through profitable reuse and recycling programs like Nike Grind, Circular Economy Director Peggy Reid T’98 is helping eliminate waste and creating a longer life for Nike’s products.
Read MoreColin Butterfield on Developing Global Leaders
Colin Butterfield T’04 describes his investment process as collaborative and bottom-up, not a top-down approach that follows established trends.
Read MorePhil Giudice
Phil Giudice T'85 is CEO of AMBRI, a Boston-based startup chasing the Holy Grail of renewable energy: cheap, reliable, and massively scalable electricity storage.
Read MoreMike Miskovsky
Energy entrepreneur Mike Miskovsky T'90 is bullish on the future of electric vehicles even though he doesn’t think much of today’s electric cars.
Read MoreSarah Barpoulis
Sarah Barpoulis T'91 credits Tuck for a style that lends itself to constructive debate, consensus building, and empowering others, which she sees as the key attributes of successful board members.
Read MoreRobert Wallace
Robert Wallace T'84 is a Baltimore-born entrepreneur who has written six books and runs three companies focusing on information technology, executive coaching, and most recently, renewable energy.
Read MoreDamali Harding
As executive director of nonprofit The Energy Co-op, Damali Harding D’99, T’06 helped Philadelphians increase their renewable energy use for a sustainable future.
Read MoreLee Taylor
Lee Taylor T’12, co-founder and CEO of REsurety, is helping to redefine the way energy companies approach risk in the promising but volatile wind energy industry.
Read MoreAndrew Smith
Andrew Smith T'07 chose Tuck first because he was looking for a beautiful environment where he could spend time thinking about how to maximize his impact on big challenges in the world.
Read MoreThad Hill
As the president and CEO of Calpine, a Fortune 500 power generator and retailer, Thad Hill T’95 is doing exactly what he envisioned when he came to Tuck in 1993.
Read MoreElyse Allan
GE Canada CEO Elyse Allan D’79, T’84 is helping advance the company’s innovation agenda one good idea at a time.
Read MoreEric Spiegel
People call Eric Spiegel T'87 the most natural leader they’ve ever met. Now CEO of Siemens USA, a global electronics and engineering powerhouse, he gets to lead on the issues that matter most. To his company and the country.
Read More