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Maxine Kennett

Head of Global Trade Compliance
Hitachi Energy

Maxine Kennett is the Head of Global Trade Compliance at Hitachi Energy.  She is a specialist in trade policy and compliance with nearly 20 years of experience in leading trade teams and programs.

Maxine Kennett

Head of Global Trade Compliance
Hitachi Energy

Maxine Kennett

Head of Global Trade Compliance
Hitachi Energy

Maxine Kennett is the Head of Global Trade Compliance at Hitachi Energy.  She is a specialist in trade policy and compliance with nearly 20 years of experience in leading trade teams and programs.

She started her career as a commercial lawyer for the international law firm, Allen & Overy, and then worked governments and international governmental organizations in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East as a Legal Policy Advisor, Trade Negotiator and Economic Growth specialist. In 2010, she returned permanently to Switzerland to take up the role of Head of Legal Affairs (General Counsel) at the International Road Transport Union (IRU) and thereafter the role of Global Head of Trade Affairs at Syngenta.

In January 2020, she joined Hitachi Energy (a global energy company with 40,000 employees) as the Head of Global Trade Compliance – where she leads the Global Trade team (of approximately 70 team members) to ensure trade compliance and optimize trade related business operations.

She is qualified as a lawyer in the UK, Ireland and Switzerland and an alumna of the University of Bern. 

 

Ameetess Dira

CEO
Petzey

Ameetess Dira

CEO
Petzey

Ameetess Dira

CEO
Petzey
 

Emily Wrenbeck

Head of Protein Engineering
Gingko Bioworks

Nathan is a four year Ginkgo veteran who has had both Design and Protein Engineering roles. Prior to Ginkgo, he was a postdoc at UCSF where he focused on de novo protein design to test structure-function relationships. His PhD is from the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where he studied peptide-membrane interactions.

Emily Wrenbeck

Head of Protein Engineering
Gingko Bioworks

Emily Wrenbeck

Head of Protein Engineering
Gingko Bioworks

Nathan is a four year Ginkgo veteran who has had both Design and Protein Engineering roles. Prior to Ginkgo, he was a postdoc at UCSF where he focused on de novo protein design to test structure-function relationships. His PhD is from the Department of Physics at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, where he studied peptide-membrane interactions.

 

Maria Fátima Lucas

CEO
Zymvol

Maria Fátima Lucas is co-founder and CEO of ZYMVOL, a Barcelona-based deeptech company specialized in enzyme design and development through computer simulations. With the aim of making industrial chemical processes more sustainable, ZYMVOL is able to discover and optimize enzymes for very specific purposes in less time than with traditional methods

Since its founding in 2017, the company has participated in several European research projects and has worked with industrial clients worldwide.

Maria Fátima Lucas

CEO
Zymvol

Maria Fátima Lucas

CEO
Zymvol

Maria Fátima Lucas is co-founder and CEO of ZYMVOL, a Barcelona-based deeptech company specialized in enzyme design and development through computer simulations. With the aim of making industrial chemical processes more sustainable, ZYMVOL is able to discover and optimize enzymes for very specific purposes in less time than with traditional methods

Since its founding in 2017, the company has participated in several European research projects and has worked with industrial clients worldwide.

Thanks to this work, in 2020 María Fátima Lucas was one of the winners of the EU Prize for Women Innovators, awarded by the European Commission.

Emerging PETs have the potential to unlock data-driven innovation across sectors, but there remain barriers to their adoption including a lack of awareness, understanding, and expertise of these technologies and how to embed them in good organisational practice.

In the session we will showcase international perspectives on PETs, by discussing their implications for policy and regulation; the technical, organisational and cultural changes that may be required to enable their effective adoption; and the role of governments and public-private partnerships in this space. We will also explore how governments are leveraging PETs in practice, through new international initiatives, and policy and regulatory efforts.

Author:

Dr. June Brawner

Senior Policy Adviser for Data and Digital Technologies
The Royal Society

Dr. June Brawner is a policy advisor at The Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences. She leads the Society’s work on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PETs) within the Data and AI policy team, which is developing policy and promoting debate that helps the UK safely and rapidly realise the growing benefits of data science and digital technologies.

June’s career in academic and policy research spans the US, UK, and Central / Eastern Europe, with a focus on environmental data for policymaking.  Prior to her current role she worked as a research consultant and has previously completed fellowships with the Fulbright Commission and Columbia University’s Council for European Studies.

As an anthropologist, June is especially interested in the ‘social life’ of data: the cultural and political factors that hinder or promote the equitable use of data for research, innovation, and decision-making. To this end, she sees upholding the right to privacy as a key technical and social challenge in using data for societal benefit.

Dr. June Brawner

Senior Policy Adviser for Data and Digital Technologies
The Royal Society

Dr. June Brawner is a policy advisor at The Royal Society, the UK’s national academy of sciences. She leads the Society’s work on Privacy Enhancing Technologies (PETs) within the Data and AI policy team, which is developing policy and promoting debate that helps the UK safely and rapidly realise the growing benefits of data science and digital technologies.

June’s career in academic and policy research spans the US, UK, and Central / Eastern Europe, with a focus on environmental data for policymaking.  Prior to her current role she worked as a research consultant and has previously completed fellowships with the Fulbright Commission and Columbia University’s Council for European Studies.

As an anthropologist, June is especially interested in the ‘social life’ of data: the cultural and political factors that hinder or promote the equitable use of data for research, innovation, and decision-making. To this end, she sees upholding the right to privacy as a key technical and social challenge in using data for societal benefit.

Author:

Mark Durkee

Head of Data and Technology
UK Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation

Mark works for the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation, leading a portfolio of work including the Centre's work on privacy enhancing technologies, and public sector algorithmic transparency. He previously led CDEI's Review into Bias in Algorithmic Decision-Making. Prior to joining CDEI in 2019, he worked in a variety of technology strategy, architecture and cyber security roles in the UK government, as a software engineer, and completed a PhD in theoretical physics.

 

Mark Durkee

Head of Data and Technology
UK Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation

Mark works for the Centre for Data Ethics and Innovation, leading a portfolio of work including the Centre's work on privacy enhancing technologies, and public sector algorithmic transparency. He previously led CDEI's Review into Bias in Algorithmic Decision-Making. Prior to joining CDEI in 2019, he worked in a variety of technology strategy, architecture and cyber security roles in the UK government, as a software engineer, and completed a PhD in theoretical physics.

 

Author:

Stephanie King

AI Initiatives Project Manager
CEIMIA

Stephanie King

AI Initiatives Project Manager
CEIMIA

Author:

Ott Velsberg

Chief Data Officer
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communications, Republic of Estonia

Ott Velsberg is the Chief Data Officer for the Estonian government. He oversees strategic coordination and implementation of data science and data governance in Estonia, including domains like artificial intelligence, privacy enhancing technologies and open data. He is also a Ph.D. researcher in the department of Informatics at Umeå University. His research concentrates on the use of information systems in the public sector, with a special focus on the use of the Internet of Things (IoT).

Ott Velsberg

Chief Data Officer
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Communications, Republic of Estonia

Ott Velsberg is the Chief Data Officer for the Estonian government. He oversees strategic coordination and implementation of data science and data governance in Estonia, including domains like artificial intelligence, privacy enhancing technologies and open data. He is also a Ph.D. researcher in the department of Informatics at Umeå University. His research concentrates on the use of information systems in the public sector, with a special focus on the use of the Internet of Things (IoT).

Author:

Suguru Iwaya

Director, Policy and Planning
Headquarters for Digital Market Competition, Cabinet Secretariat, Japan

Suguru Iwaya is a director for policy planning at the Headquarters for Digital Market Competition, Cabinet Secretariat of Japan, where he works on a market investigation into mobile ecosystem as well as an initiative that promotes the use of decentralised identity. Suguru was a policy analyst in the Science, Technology and Innovation Directorate at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris from 2017 to June 2022, where he worked on projects on data governance and risk management in digital economy. From 2008 to 2015, he worked for the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan. Suguru received a Master’s Degree in Management and Strategy from London School of Economics and Political Science in 2017, a Master’s Degree in Urban Regeneration from University College London in 2016, and a Master of Physics from Tokyo University in 2008.

Suguru Iwaya

Director, Policy and Planning
Headquarters for Digital Market Competition, Cabinet Secretariat, Japan

Suguru Iwaya is a director for policy planning at the Headquarters for Digital Market Competition, Cabinet Secretariat of Japan, where he works on a market investigation into mobile ecosystem as well as an initiative that promotes the use of decentralised identity. Suguru was a policy analyst in the Science, Technology and Innovation Directorate at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in Paris from 2017 to June 2022, where he worked on projects on data governance and risk management in digital economy. From 2008 to 2015, he worked for the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan. Suguru received a Master’s Degree in Management and Strategy from London School of Economics and Political Science in 2017, a Master’s Degree in Urban Regeneration from University College London in 2016, and a Master of Physics from Tokyo University in 2008.

Author:

Wan Sie Lee

Director, Data Innovation and Protection Group
IMDA

Wan Sie Lee

Director, Data Innovation and Protection Group
IMDA