Energy Summit 2026 - Speakers
Appalachian Energy Summit Keynote Speaker: Michael S. Regan
Michael S. Regan was nominated by the 46th President of the United States, confirmed by the United States Senate on March 10, 2021, and sworn in as the 16th Administrator of the United States Environmental Protection Agency on March 11, 2021. The son of public servants - his mother, a nurse for nearly 30 years, and his father, a retired Colonel with the North Carolina National Guard, Vietnam veteran, and former agricultural extension agent - Regan went on to follow in his parents' footsteps to pursue a career in public service. Regan has been recognized by leading domestic and global organizations/governments for his outstanding contributions to environmental protection, while spurring economic growth across numerous industry sectors. His commitment to excellence has been acknowledged through several awards, including Time Magazine TIME100 Next, Time Magazine TIME100 Health, the HBCU Honors Distinguished Public Service Award, the Boys and Girls Club of America Alumni Hall of Fame, Keystone Policy Center Leadership Award, and the NNPA National Legacy Award. Regan has traveled across the country and around the world, meeting face-to-face with communities hardest hit by environmental pollution and threats to public health. In his first year as Administrator, Regan established EPA’s Office of Environmental Justice and External Civil Rights, the first national program office in the agency’s history dedicated to solving environmental challenges in economically distressed and frontline communities. As EPA Administrator, Regan was the Chief Executive Officer of a federal regulatory agency with more than 16 thousand employees and an annual operating budget north of 10 billion dollars. With an additional historic funding boost from the United States Congress beyond the annual budget, Regan designed and led an investment strategy of more than 100 billion dollars in the health, equity, and resilience of American communities, while providing the private sector with regulatory certainty to ensure job growth, global economic competitiveness, and investor confidence.
Prior to his nomination as EPA Administrator, Regan served as the 17th Secretary of the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (NCDEQ). As Secretary, he spearheaded the development and implementation of North Carolina's seminal plan to address climate change and transition the state to a clean energy economy. Under Regan’s leadership, he secured the largest coal ash clean-up-legal settlement in United States history. He led complex negotiations regarding the clean-up of the Cape Fear River, a body of water contaminated for decades by the toxic chemicals per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). In addition, Regan established North Carolina's first-of-its-kind Environmental Justice and Equity Advisory Board to better align social inequities, environmental protection, and community empowerment. Prior to NCDEQ, Regan served as the Associate Vice President of U.S. Climate and Energy and Southeast Regional Director at the Environmental Defense Fund. He successfully managed complex negotiations with energy companies, corporate business leaders, environmental and industry associations and elected officials across the nation.
Regan is a graduate of North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University, making him the first EPA Administrator to have graduated from a Historically Black University. He earned a master’s degree in public administration from The George Washington University and received an honorary doctorate from North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University in 2021. He and his wife Melvina are proud parents of their son Matthew and dog Zeus.
Paul Bielicki
Paul Bielicki is a licensed architect who loves solving problems. He finds it especially rewarding when the solution has a practical application and can be seen and analyzed in use. Further knowledge can be gathered from this solution and then used in the formulation of the next solution. It is a cyclical process of discovery, learning, and discovery again. He is currently applying his love of the problem to building enclosures and their direct impact on interior environmental quality. Paul is also trained as a structural engineer helping to add an additional level of project problem-solving abilities. However, even having gone through engineering, drawing remains his favored method for problem-solving. Paul’s research interests are based on efficiency, particularly how sustainability is a specialized form of efficiency. In addition to building enclosures, he is interested in how building materials and systems may be reused rather than recycled at the end of a building's life, thereby saving the energy required to recycle the components. Reuse is most often undertaken as an adaptive change to building programming, but his focus is on component reuse in other building projects. Outside the office, Paul is a founding member of the Building Enclosure Council-Charlotte, is a former vice chair, has served on the strategic planning committee since the chapter’s founding, and is the 2026 Knowledge Director. He is also a lead mentor with Architecture Construction Engineering (ACE) Mentoring-Charlotte and has been involved with the organization for the past seven years.
Sheila Blanchard
Sheila Blanchard is a program analyst II with the State Energy Office, where she has been a member of the Utility Savings Initiative team since fall 2024. Prior to this role, she spent six years as an Environmental Consultant with the Division of Air Quality as the state DERA grant administrator and on the Volkswagen Settlement team. Sheila holds degrees from North Carolina State University, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and Indiana University.
Sue Bork
Sue Bork is a technology advisor to campuses across the U.S., helping leaders evaluate technology as a solution to evolving campus needs. She works with myriad of higher education stakeholders to address engagement concerns and empower strategic decisions enabled by actionable data. Her collaboration with the University of Tennessee, Knoxville helped them manage hybrid return-to-campus models post-COVID-19 and to plan for the future of campus development. She is also responsible for working with Nova Southeastern University, Florida on their $100 million in savings.
Jordan Duke
Jordan Duke is a licensed unlimited general contractor and owner of Renew Design and Build located in Durham, North Carolina. After receiving an undergraduate degree from Appalachian State University in Appropriate Technology, now Sustainable Technology and the Built Environment, it's no surprise he became a Certified Passive House Consultant, Builder and Rater determined to bring high performance to the mixed-humid south. He leads the Durham chapter of the BS and Beer Show where architects, designers, builders, trades and BS nerds all meet to talk shop and visit local high- performance construction sites. His expertise in building science, combined with his field experience, offers a realistic yet hopeful view of how single-family residential construction and remodeling can help meet our collective energy and climate goals.
Laura Erin England
Laura Erin England is an ecologist, environmental communicator and changemaker who began her career in the nonprofit sector developing and leading outreach programs. She taught in Appalachian State University’s Department of Sustainable Development for 15 years and now co-leads campuswide climate literacy efforts as App State’s director of academic sustainability initiatives.
Rob Howard
Rob Howard is President of Howard Building Science, based in Granite Falls, NC. As a Licensed General Contractor, Howard Building Science provides sustainable development and net-zero energy home construction in the High Country and Foothills of Western North Carolina. Rob has over 20 years of experience in the construction industry. He is the former Director of Construction at Habitat for Humanity of Catawba Valley, where he built ENERGY STAR homes through Advanced Energy’s SystemVision program. He built the first Net-Zero Energy Home in North Carolina in partnership with the Appalachian Energy Center in 2005. He also built the first DOE Zero Energy Ready Homes in North Carolina in 2015. Previous roles include 5 years as a Sustainable Building Specialist with Habitat for Humanity International and 4 years as a Performance Construction Manager with Mitsubishi Electric. Rob holds a bachelor’s degree and a renewable energy technologies diploma from North Carolina State University. He also holds a master’s degree in sustainable technology and building science from Appalachian State University where he serves as a lecturer.
Evan Hutchison
Evan Hutchison is a residential project manager at Howard Building Science, Inc. He graduated from Appalachian State University's Building Science program with a double major in Architectural Technology & Design and Construction Management. During his time at ASU, he worked as an assistant to Dr. Arezou Sadoughi for her exploration into mass timber modular construction, helping with outreach, marketing and research, and was part of the construction team for her module. He aspires to further the mission of sustainable design in his career, using his time at ASU as a strong foundation to build on.
Aly Khalifa
Aly Khalifa is a systems thinker, inventor, and sustainability strategist with more than 30 years of experience at the intersection of innovation, manufacturing, and environmental stewardship. He has developed more than 47 patents and led award-winning initiatives that embed sustainability into product architecture, supply chains, and business models — linking technical design to long-term environmental and economic performance. He is the founder of Positive Company and the originator of the Coflourishing framework, which explores how institutions, infrastructure, markets, and natural systems can be intentionally designed to thrive together. His work spans circular economy strategy, sustainability platforms, and materials innovation — grounded in the belief that meaningful progress requires shared prosperity.
Natalie MacDonald
Natalie MacDonald is an associate in Buro Happold’s Durham office, where she specializes in mechanical buildings systems design with a focus on sustainability, decarbonization, and energy efficiency. She has experience in the design and energy modeling of HVAC systems in a variety of markets including higher education, state/local, federal, K-12, healthcare, and laboratories. In addition to design, she has extensive experience with building assessments, particularly facility condition assessments and energy audits, helping facilities optimize energy use and carbon footprint with practical operations and cost. Outside of Buro Happold, Natalie serves as the governor-appointed mechanical engineer seat on the North Carolina Building Code Council. She is also highly active in ASHRAE, volunteering in multiple capacities such as President of the Triangle Chapter for the 2021-2022 year, Student Activities Regional vice chair for Region IV, and voting member on TC 2.8 Building Environmental Impacts and Sustainability.
Dr. Jamie Russell
Dr. Jamie Russell serves as director of the Appalachian Energy Center at Appalachian State University. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Clemson University and earned his doctorate in mechanical engineering from the University of South Carolina. He joined AppState in 2008, where he now holds the rank of full professor. Dr. Russell has also worked for seven years as a machine design engineer and environmental health and safety manager in the architectural glass industry, two years as a research fellow at Ulster University in Belfast, as well as serving for two years as an invited professor at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, (EPFL) in Switzerland. Jamie enjoys working with teams to develop products from concept to reality and has managed three solar decathlon competition projects, including the Solar Homestead (U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Solar Decathlon 2011), Solar Decathlon Europe 2014, and US DOE Solar Decathlon 2017.
Dr. Arezou Sadoughi
Dr. Arezou Sadoughi is an assistant professor in the Department of Sustainable Technology and the Built Environment (STBE) at Appalachian State University. She is the inventor of the mass-produced Hybrid Mass Timber structural system (File No. Z3122001, USV, 2022). Her expertise lies in affordable housing and industrialized construction, with a focus on design for manufacturing and assembly (DfMA), low-carbon materials, mass timber systems, and healthy housing. Dr. Sadoughi leads research in material efficiency, design, and engineering of modular timber structures. She is also a co-founder of MassTiMod, LLC, supported by the Do North Forestry Accelerator program. She has secured funding from the U.S. Forest Service to support design validation and engineering of hybrid mass timber systems. Over the last several years, she has authored more than seven publications in affordable housing and industrialized construction.
George Santucci
George Santucci is the Town of Boone’s sustainability and special projects manager. He now manages Boone's Community Climate Action Plan, greenhouse gas (GHG) inventory, renewable energy purchases, solar installations, electrifying the town's fleet, increasing public EV charging infrastructure, funding to improve stormwater infrastructure, and funding stream restoration and water quality improvements. Boone has a strong commitment to sustainable practices. It is the first town in North Carolina to purchase all municipal electricity from 100% renewable sources. In 2021, the Town of Boone hired George to achieve this goal and to ensure renewable energy for the entire town by 2050. George comes to Boone with a strong environmental and river conservation background.
Jessica Scarlett
Jessica Scarlett joined WoodWorks Wood Products Council in 2021 as the regional director of the Carolinas and Tennessee and comes to the team with a background in architecture, structural engineering, and acoustics/vibration. Jessica is a native Carolinian, but has worked all across the U.S. and Canada. She holds a bachelor’s from UNC Charlotte and a master/s from Clemson University. What she enjoys most about her role at Woodworks is being able to utilize her design and technical backgrounds in concert. Upon joining WoodWorks, she becomes the third generation of her family to work in the wood industry.
Bekim Sejdiu
Bekim Sejdiu brings momentum and systems thinking to shape a thriving resilient future. He helps teams envision what’s possible by connecting inputs to outcomes, translating data into compelling design strategies, and building excitement around regenerative approaches that create positive spillover across projects and culture. Bekim uses data to drive accountability and guide decisions, while reminding teams that “every line we draw has a massive climate impact.” He’s passionate about showing what’s achievable through case studies and how core building science principles can unlock climate-responsive solutions anywhere. Outside the studio, Bekim turns to the natural world for renewal and perspective. Whether he’s hiking the ancient Smokies, or exploring another national park on his list, time outdoors sharpens his curiosity and deepens his belief in people as stewards of the living systems around us.
James Sharp
James Sharp serves as outreach manager for the Appalachian Energy Center with a focus on facilitating partnerships to co-create clean energy strategies and policies supporting economic growth, environmental protection, and resilience for North Carolina communities. He manages the Center’s workshops program and other extension initiatives. James has 20 years of experience serving organizations and communities with a focus on strategic planning, business development, project management, and stakeholder engagement programs. Certified by the American Institute of Community Planners, James is a doctoral candidate in urban planning and public affairs at the University of Texas at Arlington, where his areas of research focus include socio-technical transitions in rural communities, location behavior, and the role of planners in preparing their communities for better futures. James is also an adjunct instructor in community and regional planning at Appalachian State University.
Galen Staengl
Galen Staengl is a mechanical engineer with a passion for sustainable design. Galen has more than 25 years of experience designing cutting-edge energy-efficient mechanical systems for green building projects. He is the founder of Staengl Engineering, a Virginia-based mechanical, electrical, and plumbing consulting firm that provides design and energy analysis for Passive and Net Zero energy buildings around the country. Galen is also a member of the Technical Committee for the Passive House Institute U.S.
Hannah Stroot
As a community recycling specialist with the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality, Hannah works with local governments, state agencies, and educational institutions across the state to improve their recycling programs. She has experience managing grants, providing technical assistance, and supporting collaboration and data-driven decisions in materials management. Hannah holds a master's degree in economics and policy of energy and the environment from the University College London and has a broad background in climate action, clean energy, and sustainable resource use.
BJ Tipton
BJ Tipton is the AASHE STARS data assistant for Appalachian State University. She recently received a master's in Sustainability and Environment from UNC Greensboro. She worked a full and rewarding career in collegiate recycling and waste management at both UNC Charlotte and UNC Chapel Hill before joining the App State Sustainability and Energy Management team. In her off hours, she enjoys mountain biking and knitting, just not at the same time!
Christine Wittmeier
Christine Wittmeier is the organics recycling team lead for the Recycling and Materials Management Section at the North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality’s Division of Environmental Assistance and Customer Service. In this role, she provides statewide technical assistance on organics recycling, manages the Food Waste Reduction Grant, and leads the state’s food waste prevention campaign, Use the Food NC. Prior to joining the state, Christine served as environmental programs supervisor for Henderson County, where she spearheaded multiple composting initiatives. With a strong background in environmental education and materials management, she is dedicated to advancing organics recycling and food recovery across North Carolina.
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