Pilita Clark is an associate editor and business columnist
at the Financial Times. She writes a weekly column on modern corporate life, as
well as features and other articles.
She joined the FT in 2003 as a commissioning editor on the
paper's weekend magazine and went on to cover aviation and the environment. She
was previously a Washington correspondent for Australian newspapers and a
Nieman Fellow at Harvard University.
Mark Carney is Governor of the Bank of England
and Chairman of the Monetary Policy Committee, Financial Policy Committee and
the Prudential Regulation Committee. His appointment as Governor was
approved by Her Majesty the Queen on 26 November 2012. The Governor joined the
Bank on 1 July 2013.
In addition to his duties as Governor of the Bank of England, he serves as
Chairman of the Financial Stability Board (FSB), First Vice-Chair of the
European Systemic Risk Board, a member of the Group of Thirty and the
Foundation Board of the World Economic Forum.
Mark Carney was born in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories, Canada in 1965. He
received a bachelor’s degree in Economics from Harvard University in 1988. He
went on to receive a master’s degree in Economics in 1993 and a doctorate in
Economics in 1995, both from Oxford University.
After a thirteen-year career with Goldman Sachs in its London, Tokyo, New York
and Toronto offices, Mark Carney was appointed Deputy Governor of the Bank of
Canada in August 2003. In November 2004, he left the Bank of Canada to become
Senior Associate Deputy Minister of Finance. He held this position until his
appointment as Governor of the Bank of Canada on 1 February 2008. Mark Carney
served as Governor of the Bank of Canada and Chairman of its Board of Directors
until 1 June 2013.
Maureen
Cropper is a Distinguished University Professor and Chair of
the Department of Economics at the University of Maryland. She is also a Senior Fellow at Resources for
the Future, a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research
and a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
Professor Cropper served as a Lead Economist in the
World Bank’s Research Department from 1993-2006 and was a member of the USEPA’s
Science Advisory Board from 1994-2006, where she chaired the Advisory Council on
Clean Air Compliance Analysis and the Environmental Economics Advisory
Committee. She recently co-chaired the
National Academy of Sciences Committee on Assessing Approaches to Updating the Social Cost of Carbon.
Professor Cropper’s research has focused on valuing
environmental amenities, on evaluating the tradeoffs implicit in environmental
regulations and on the choice of discount rates for evaluating public policies. She has published over 80 books and journal
articles. Her current research centers on
valuing climate amenities in the US and evaluating energy and environmental
policies in India.
Head of Responsible Investing for Global
Fixed Income at BlackRock. She is a portfolio manager on global green and
socially responsible mandates and leads the coordination of the BlackRock firm
wide Green Bond effort. She partners with BlackRock's Global Fixed Income team
to bring ESG and climate risk integration tools and strategies to the
investment process. Prior to this role, she spent several years in the Global
Rates Trading team. Previous to BlackRock, Ms. Schulten's work included 20
years as a sell side interest rate and options trader.
Ms. Schulten earned a BA in Political Science from
Vanderbilt University in 1992. She serves on the Executive Committee of Green
Bond Principles and Cicero's Climate Finance Board. She has contributed to
publications on green finance including "Investor Expectations of the Green
Bond Market" through Ceres and "Categorizing Climate Risk for
Investors" through the Cicero Center for International Climate Research.
In her personal capacity, she sits on the Board of the Mianus River Gorge, the
first Nature Conservancy land project.

Lord Stern is IG Patel Professor of Economics and
Government at the LSE and Chairman of its Grantham Research Institute on
Climate Change and the Environment. He is a member of the G20 Eminent Persons
Group. He was President of the British
Academy (July 2013 – July 2017) and elected Fellow of the Royal Society
(2014). He was Chief Economist at both
the World Bank, 2000-2003, and the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (1994-1999). He was Head of the UK Government Economic Service
(2003-2007) and produced the landmark Stern
Review (2006) on the economics of climate change. He was knighted in 2004,
made a cross-bench life peer in 2007 and appointed Companion of Honour in 2017
for services to economics, international relations and tackling climate
change. His most recent book is “Why are
We Waiting?” MIT Press, 2015.