• CERAWeek
  • March 18 - 22, 2024
  • About

Abigail Ross Hopper

Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA)

President & Chief Executive Officer

Abigail Ross Hopper is the President and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association, the national trade organization for America's solar energy industries. She oversees all of SEIA's activities, including government affairs, research, communications, and industry leadership, and is focused on creating a marketplace where solar will constitute a significant percentage of America’s energy generation. Before joining SEIA, Abby was the Director of the Department of Interior's Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, where she led the agency that oversaw the leasing and development of all offshore energy, from oil and natural gas to offshore wind. She served formerly as the Director of the Maryland Energy Administration (MEA), serving as acting beginning in 2012, and then as Director starting in June 2013. She also served concurrently as Energy Advisor to Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley since 2010. In those roles, she had significant engagement with the state’s electric distribution utilities on matters ranging from resiliency and reliability of the grid to multiple mergers of the state’s utilities. Abby previously spent over two years as Deputy General Counsel with the Maryland Public Service Commission. Before embarking on a career in public service, Abby spent nine years in private practice. Abby graduated Cum Laude from the University of Maryland School of Law and earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Dartmouth College. She is the very proud mom of three children and loves to read, ride her Peloton, do hot yoga and lie on the beach in her (not so free) time.

Sessions With Abigail Ross Hopper

Thursday, 9 March

  • 12:00pm - 12:50pm (CST) / 09/mar/2023 06:00 pm - 09/mar/2023 06:50 pm

    Reshoring and Friendshoring: Impact on energy supply chains

    Energy Infrastructure/Supply Chain
    Renewable energy supply chains have been challenged immensely in recent years following the twin energy shocks of COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine. Governments in key renewable markets such as the United States and Europe have made huge strides to push increased levels of domestic manufacturing to avoid over-dependency of supply from a limited number of markets and improve energy resiliency. Will the benefits of local supply chains outweigh a globalized supply chain? Will developers and end-use customers be willing to pay higher costs for locally made renewable components? Can renewable energy manufacturers scale locally while remaining cost competitive with global players?