automotive, aerospace, gaming, hospitality and real estate industries. These investments ranged from public equities and bonds to deeply distressed securities, par bank debt, minority owned private equity and majority owned private equity. Mr. Shribman worked in close collaboration with management teams and boards to maximize shareholder value in the form of both operational turnarounds, capital market financing and capital deployment initiatives. Prior to Anchorage Capital Group, L.L.C., Mr. Shribman worked at Tinicum Capital Partners, a private equity firm, and in the restructuring advisory group at Lazard (NYSE: LAZ).
In April 2019, Mr. Shribman led the initial public offering of BRPM, a blank check company with a business purpose substantially similar to the Company, but sponsored by an affiliate of B. Riley Financial. On December 12, 2019, BRPM announced its entry into a definitive agreement relating to its initial business combination with Alta, a leading provider of premium industrial and construction equipment and related services. The transaction was valued at approximately $540 million and closed on February 14, 2020. Further, in May 2020, Mr. Shribman led the initial public offering of BRPM II. On September 8, 2020, BRPM II announced its entry into a definitive agreement relating to its initial business combination with Eos Energy, a leading manufacturer of safe, reliable, low-cost zinc battery storage systems. The transaction was valued at approximately $500 million and closed on November 16, 2020.
William Campbell. William Campbell, 73, provides a global law-firm legal perspective on energy and thirty years of experience with the development and operation of large-scale, global energy and infrastructure projects. Mr. Campbell is General Counsel and Managing Director of I Squared Capital and head of ESG and Sustainability. Previously, Mr. Campbell served as co-chair of the Global Energy and Infrastructure Practice Group at the international law firm of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP.
Michael Salvator. Michael Salvator, 49, has more than 25 years of experience in the finance, private equity and accounting industries. He serves as Chief Operating Officer of Stone Canyon Industries Holdings, Inc., a global industrial holding company. Previously, he was Senior Managing Director and Chief Financial Officer of J.H. Whitney & Co., a middle market private equity firm. Mr. Salvator began his career as an accountant with the accounting firms of Arthur Andersen and Grant Thornton. Mr. Salvator has served as a board member at several industrial, manufacturing, consumer products and energy companies, including Viridity Energy.
Russell Stidolph. See Management, above.
Audrey Zibelman. Audrey Zibelman, 64, is a thirty plus year veteran in the power industry and is a well-known international expert in power system transformation, regulation, markets and technology. Ms. Zibelman has served in leadership roles as a utility executive, regulator, system operator and entrepreneur. Ms. Zibelman recently stepped down from the role of Managing Director and CEO of the Australian Energy Market Operator, the national grid and market operator of Australia to assume a leadership position in energy at X, the Alphabet Moonshot factory. Prior to AEMO Ms. Zibelman was the Chair of the New York Public Service Commission where she was a member of the Governor’s cabinet and oversaw the electric, gas, water, steam and communication utilities in NY. While in NY Ms Zibelman oversaw massive regulatory reform of the electric industry to support a decarbonized grid, known as Reforming the Energy Vision, or REV. Ms. Zibelman also had previous executive roles at PJM, the US largest wholesale market operator and Xcel energy and was also the founder and CEO of Viridity Energy.
Market Opportunity
Flowing from our three inflection points – renewables transformation, electrification, and decarbonization – we see huge opportunities in five already established or rapidly developing alternative energy market subsectors:
Renewable Technology Adoption and Applications: With renewables set to attract $12 trillion of global investment in new energy generation capacity between 2020 and 2050 (80% of the total), tremendous profits will be earned by companies that outperform I Squared in scaling this build out or improving its efficiency. We expect these companies to include winners in next-generation photovoltaics, power electronics, renewables-powered infrastructure (data centers, desalination, urban agriculture, hydrogen production, etc.), and electrification enabling technology. For example, industries identified as targets for electrification by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory currently burn $28 billion annually in oil and gas fuel for thermal processes and electric power.
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