
Elisabeth Haub School of Law Professor Craig Hart and Alumnus Basil Seggos Rank Among theΒ 2021 Energy & Environment Power 100

Professor Craig Hart, Executive Director of the Pace Energy and Climate Center at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law at ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½, was named to the β2021 Energy & Environment Power 100β list published by City & State ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½ magazine. Professor Hart was ranked #65 on the prestigious list which includes public officials, energy executives, environmentalists, activists, academics and others who are driving the debate on climate change and reinventing how ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½ers get their power.
Distinguished Haub Law alumnus Basil Seggos β01, Commissioner, State Department of Environmental Conservation, received the #1 ranking for his leadership in ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½ Stateβs climate change law. Additionally, former Haub Law Visiting Professor Judith Enck, Founder and President of Beyond Plastics and former EPA Region 2 Administrator, ranked #40 along with Fred Zalcman at #16, who served as Pace Energy & Climate Centerβs Executive Director from 2001 β 2007. Haub Law also acknowledges litigation partners Kim Fraczek, Director of SANE Energy, who ranked #83 and Bob Howarth, Professor of Ecology and Environmental Biology at Cornell University, who ranked #64.
βWe are so proud of the important work that both Craig and Basil are doing to address the growing threat of climate change in ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½ and beyond and congratulate them on this recognition,β said Dean Horace E. Anderson Jr., Dean of the Law School. βAs the #1 ranked environmental law program, Haub Law remains committed to advancing climate change law and policies that enact a global response and salutes our past and present faculty, alumni and colleagues for their bold leadership.β
#65 Craig Hart
Executive Director, Pace Energy and Climate Center
Pace Law School brought Craig Hart on to run the schoolβs energy and climate center two years ago. Hart, who has advised governments on policies regarding renewables, grid modernization and financing infrastructure, has supported clean energy initiatives in the American Jobs Plan and urged private-sector employers to reorient toward sustainability. He also led Paceβs partnership with the Westchester County Association to launch a clean energy portal to help businesses find government initiatives allowing them to lower their carbon emissions.
#1 Basil Seggos
Commissioner, State Department of Environmental Conservation
Not only did Basil Seggos stay on as commissioner of the state Department of Environmental Conservation during the transition from the Cuomo regime to the Hochul administration, he turned heads in October with his agencyβs decision to block permits for proposed repowering projects in Queens and upstate ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½. This was done on the grounds that investing in natural gas infrastructure is contrary to the stateβs Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act. Seggos, who has led DEC since 2015, also co-chairs the ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½ State Climate Action Council, which is tasked with implementing ΒιΆΉΜμΓΐ΄«Γ½βs ambitious climate change law.