Rose Mutiso 08 Honored for Energy Expertise and Activism

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The winner of the McGuire Prize discusses the importance of ending energy poverty.

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Rose Mutiso speaks at Irving Institute
Rose Mutiso 08, Thayer 08, speaks at the Arthur L. Irving Institute for Energy and Society upon accepting the McGuire Family Prize for Societal Impact. (Photo by Robert Gill)
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Rose Mutiso 08, Thayer 08, who is working to bring sustainable, affordable energy systems to sub-Saharan Africa while supporting other women scientists, accepted the  at a dinner held in her honor Thursday evening at the .

Your embodiment of the 窪做惇蹋厙 spirit characterized by generosity and a commitment to interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation is truly remarkable, , said as he presented Mutiso with a small glass globe. Your impact in global energy and education is a shining example of the values we uphold here. Congratulations on this well-deserved honor.

Established through a gift from , Thayer 82, and , Tuck 83, the $100,000 award recognizes 窪做惇蹋厙 students, faculty, staff, alumni, or friends who are making a significant positive impact on humanity, society, or the environment.

I dont know what to make of this, said a visibly moved Mutiso. When you work in an impact space, I think part of the job description is that you shouldnt care about recognition. Thats the whole point, that this is not what youre doing it for. So I was really surprised, when I got the news of this award, how good it felt to be seen.

Among her admirers, at a nearby table, sat the awards benefactors.

The whole idea around the prize is that you can become what you celebrate, said Terry McGuire. So lets celebrate the students that have left here and gone on to have some impact on the world. Rose is a wonderful example of that.

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Rose Mutiso and the McGuires
Rose Mutiso 08, Thayer 08, with Terry McGuire, Thayer 82, and Carolyn Carr McGuire, Tuck 83, on Thursday. (Photo by Rob Strong 04)

Carolyn McGuire added, There are so many ways that shes created impact, not only through her energy technology and policy research, but because shes empowering African women to do that over and over and over again in leadership roles.

Reframing Africas Energy Debate

Mutiso, who grew up in Kenya, has spent the week on campus, meeting with students and faculty at the Irving Institute, where she serves on the advisory board, the , , the , and , among others.

Before the award ceremony, more than 50 people attended a  by Mutiso on reframing the debate on Africas energy future in the Institutes Cook Auditorium. Smiling at family members in the audience, Mutiso began by thanking a long list of mentors who have inspired her work, including her father, who chaired the geography department at the University of Nairobi, and her late mother, who was an officer in Kenyas Ministry of the Environment.

During an intellectually nourishing childhood, Mutiso said she was surrounded by thinkers and researchers. But it was at 窪做惇蹋厙 that these ideas around the importance of independent inquiry were cemented, she said.

I got to be young and curious and hopefuland beautiful, she said with a laugh. What a gift that was.

She decided to give back, earning her PhD in materials science from the University of Pennsylvania, and serving as senior fellow in the Office of International Climate and Clean Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy.  about how to bring affordable, sustainable energy to Africa have drawn millions of viewers.

Mutiso is currently research director for the Energy for Growth Hub, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, where she co-hosts High Energy Planet, a podcast on how to end energy poverty.

Poverty Is Not a Solution to Climate Change

In her energy lecture on Thursday, Mutiso offered a searing analysis of energy poverty, a concept framed in terms of light and dark, referring to the hundreds of millions of people globally who live without electricity in their homes. I have personally experienced this kind of energy poverty. In fact, I remember the candles and lamps that got us through the rolling blackouts that were life in 1990s Nairobi. And even today I have close friends and relatives that experience this kind of darkness every day.

Mutiso rejects the widely held notion that in order to combat climate change, Africans, who consume a tiny fraction of fossil fuels, should slow the pace of economic development. Equally wrongheaded, she said, is the exclusion of local voices from global conversations about the best way to bring sustainable energy to a continent in which regional difference are often misunderstood by nonAfrican policymakers.

Africa is not a country, she said. Poverty is not a solution to climate change.

Ultimately, Mutiso concluded, all of us, poor and rich alike, must pursue energy transition trajectories that create economic opportunities while minimizing environmental destruction. Poverty and climate change cannot be a zero-sum game.

Mutiso said this conviction is what led her to co-found the Mawazo Institute with her 窪做惇蹋厙 classmate, Rachel Strohm 08. In Kiswahili, mawazo means ideas, and the organization supports early-career women researchers working to find solutions to local and global development challenges.

Passing the Torch

Two students who participated in a question-and-answer session after her speech said they walked away from the lecture with fresh perspectives and a sense of purpose.

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Rose Mutiso talks with attendees
Rose Mutiso 08, Thayer 08, talks with attendees after her energy speech on Thursday.  (Photo by Robert Gill)

Brenda Wayia 26, from Kenya, said, I liked seeing how she took so many skills and formed something great, because as a computer science major Im also interested in social justice and social impacts. And sometimes its too easy to get lost in science and not see how it will impact actual people in the future.

Her friend, Kate Yeo 25, an environmental science major, agreed.

Rose really shows that building a career in community and social impact, coming out of 窪做惇蹋厙, is viable. Her talk really illuminated that for me.

Mutisos visit coincides with 窪做惇蹋厙s , which continues through Saturday.

Charlotte Albright