Industry Insights
Women’s History Month 2024: Celebrating Women Who Power the Energy Industry
In celebration of Women’s History Month 2024, we’re recognizing remarkable contributions from women whose ingenuity, leadership and perseverance catalyzed critical transformation in the energy sector. From pioneers in renewable energy to influential policy makers and engineers who have revolutionized how we harness and distribute energy, we’re celebrating a few of the many women who have laid the groundwork for a more inclusive and forward-thinking industry. Keep reading as we share parts of their stories and recognize the exceptional impacts they’ve made in powering the energy industry forward.
Edith Clarke
Edith Clarke was the first woman to earn her master’s in
electrical engineering from MIT and to be professionally employed as
an electric engineer in the United States. After working on electric
power transmission line problems at General Electric for 26 years, she
taught electrical engineering (EE) at the University of Texas, Austin,
where she became the first female EE professor in the U.S. and worked
there until she retired. Between 1923 and 1951, Clarke authored or
co-authored nineteen technical papers. She became the first women
elected a fellow of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and
received a lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Women
Engineers, which highlighted her ability to simplify laborious
calculations in the design and operation of electrical power systems
and her work in system instability.1
Grace Hopper
Grace Murray Hopper was an American computer scientist and United
States naval officer. Hopper is best known for her trailblazing
contributions to computer programming, software development, and the
design and implementation of programming languages. In 1952, she
developed the first compiler called A-O, which translated mathematical
code into machine-readable code, and this was a critical step toward
creating modern programming languages. She retired from the Navy as a
rear admiral at the age of 97 – the oldest serving officer in the U.S.
armed forces. The U.S. Navy destroyer USS Hopper (DDG-70) is named
after her, as was the Cray XE6 "Hopper" supercomputer at
NERSC. Although she passed away in 1996, she was honored with the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016 in recognition of her lifelong
leadership role in the field of computer science.2
Dr. Shirley Jackson
Dr. Shirley Jackson was the first African American woman to earn
a doctorate at MIT and is responsible for monumental
telecommunications research that led to the invention of products such
as the touch-tone phone, portable fax, fiber optic cables and caller
ID. In 1994, she served as chair of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
where she developed and implemented regulations for assessing risk at
the country’s nuclear power plants. In 1999, Jackson returned to
academia and became the 18th president of the Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. While in this position, Dr. Jackson worked to reduce the
student-faculty ratio, increase research funding and facilitate the
addition of new facilities. During her presidential tenure at RPI,
applications to the school nearly quadrupled and research dollars
tripled.3
Maria Telkes
Born in Hungary, Maria Telkes made a name for herself in the
field of solar energy research and development as ‘the Sun Queen.”
After earning her B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Budapest, she
moved to the United States and joined the Cleveland Clinic Foundation
as a biophysicist, where her work with George Washington Crile, a
well-known surgeon, led to the development of a photoelectric device
to measure brain waves. During World War II, she invented and patented
an emergency desalination kit that used solar power to make seawater
drinkable for pilots and sailors stranded in the Pacific. After the
war, she created the first solar-powered home heating system in the
late 1940s and helped the U.S. Department of Energy create the first
solar-electric residence.4
Vivian Yam Wing-Wah
Professor Vivian Wing-Wah Yam is a chemist whose work on brighter
and more efficient organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) has led to
the development of more efficient displays for mobile phones and
laptops. As a professor in Chemistry and Energy at the University of
Hong Kong and an Associate Editor of Inorganic Chemistry, her aim is
to reduce the amount of energy used in lighting by developing much
more efficient lights and displays as well other use cases, such as
increasing digital data storage capacity. Yam’s research on
organometallic luminophores helped develop OLEDs into the well-known
and widely used technology they are today. She also happens to be the
youngest female ever elected to the Chinese Academy of Sciences.5
Stay tuned for upcoming blogs in celebration of Women’s History Month, where we’ll spotlight the talented women of Itron who are driving innovation, inspiring their colleagues and leading the way for future generations of women.
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