Jeanette Gitobu: Redefining the Women’s Role in the Renewable Energy Industry
Most Influential Black Corporate Executives to Watch in 2023
In 2020, Women in Wind in partnership with
IRENA published “Renewable energy: A Gender Perspective,” the
report summarized the findings of a survey among close to 1500 respondents from
144 countries working in the renewable energy sector. A key finding from the
report was that women make up 21% of the global wind energy workforce, and 65%
of them perceive gender-related barriers in the sector. The Women in Wind
Global Leadership Program redefines women’s role in the industry by creating a
multi-dimensional program that supports women to become industry thought
leaders via providing knowledge-transfer webinars and mentoring, increases
women’s representation at managerial and decision-making levels by empowering
women, in the wind sector, and prepares the next generation of women leaders in
the wind through concrete career goals, road-mapping, and networking building
opportunities.
“An environment where individuals can safely
brainstorm and challenge the status quo helps drive innovation,” says Jeanette Gitobu.
Jeanette, Director of the Women
in Wind Global Leadership Program, is responsible for designing
and implementing the curriculum of the program while working across partners to
deliver a diverse and multidimensional program for the participants to benefit
from. Her work as a Policy Advisor, helps shape the African wind market policy
framework via research and report writing. Part of Jeanette’s work also
includes engaging with institutions such as the International Renewable Energy
Agency (IRENA), UNFCCC, UN (Various agencies), philanthropic entities, and many
other bodies to help raise awareness of gender equality in the energy
transition and provide S.M.A.R.T solutions to ensure the energy transition is a
Just Transition.
A regular day for her includes having a
check-in call with Women in Wind program partners, the Global Women’s Network
for the Energy Transition (GWNET), a check-in with the GWEC team ranging from
members within the projects, policy, fundraising, and communications teams,
then sitting down to do focused work such as reports, project management
activities, and introductory calls to explore strategic partnership
opportunities.
Steeping to Extensiveness
Prior to joining GWEC, Jeanette Gitobu was
working at Windlab, an Australian global renewable energy development company,
where the Kenyan team and she were working on Africa’s first of its kind,
large-scale hybrid renewable energy power plant, Meru County Energy Park
(MCEP). The project’s innovative design combining ~80MW of wind turbines, solar
PV, and battery storage technology ensured that Windlab was able to offer clean
electricity at an affordable price to Kenya’s 52 million citizens. Once
connected to the national grid, MCEP will put Kenya on the global map as a
leader in renewable energy innovation, capable of designing and implementing
local solutions to combat global problems.
According to Jeanette, working on such a
ground-breaking and challenging project as the only black and female project
developer to successfully sign over 1,700 landowners onto the project pushed
her to create innovative solutions to complex problems, such as creating data
management dashboards capable of analyzing data for over 1,700 project area
landowners, a first in the renewable energy sector. The dashboard would then
feed key information to facilitate payments to landowners via mobile money
transfer medium M-PESA, another first in the sector, revolutionizing payment
method options for future projects that wish to implement similar concepts.
GWEC
GWEC is a non-profit trade association that
serves as the authoritative voice for the wind energy sector. GWEC members
represent 99 percent of the world’s installed wind power capacity and include
over 1,500 companies, organizations, and institutions from over 80 countries,
including manufacturers, developers, component suppliers, research
institutions, national wind and renewables associations, and electricity
providers, and finance and insurance firms. GWEC provides value to its members
through six major workstreams:
- Capacity Building; 2. Intelligence; 3. Advocacy and Policy; 4.
Summits and Conferences; 5. Business Matching; 6. Collaboration.
Jeanette oversees the Women in Wind Global
Leadership Program, which was founded in 2019 in response to the desire for
diversity in climate policy and action. Greater variety benefits the wind
sector, and hence the globe, by assuring new viewpoints and economic
development among those driving the climate change response. In a world filled
with difficult global concerns that need strong leadership and a competent
workforce, the push for a sustainable, clean energy system must include all
voices speaking up, especially women.
Finding Success in Serving Society
Growing up, Jeanette loved playing
basketball and was part of her high school basketball team in Phnom Penh,
Cambodia. That is when her coach said a quote by American basketball coach John
Wooden that changed her view on success, “Success is peace of mind, in
knowing you did your best to become the best that you are capable of
becoming.” She also believes that each individual has their own
definition of success with each definition being valid and true.
Jeanette’s concept of success is similar to
John Wooden’s, and she defines it as having peace of mind, body, and spirit
while serving society within her domains of influence. Jeanette values peace of
mind, body, and spirit because she feels it offers the best and healthiest
environment for her to provide the finest ideas, strategies, and leadership to
have a significant effect on the world while enhancing efficiency and reaching
her goals. She also adds, “Being of service to society within my
spheres of influence is important to me because I would not be here without the
trust, support, guidance, and mentoring of people who chose to take a chance on
me. I wish to pay forward that opportunity by providing others the opportunity
to rise by using me as a ladder towards their goals and ambitions.”
Referring to the late bishop Desmond Tutu’s
words, “My humanity is bound up in yours, for we can only be human
together,” Jeanette explains that the human experience can get
challenging at times, but together, we can make it and rise above any challenge
we confront.
An Opportunity for a Global Approach
When Jeanette decided to join GWEC, one of
the important questions she was debating was what this transition would mean to
her and where she would see herself in the future. Taking her previous
experience working on the development side of wind projects, accepting GWEC’s
offer was the next step for her because GWEC offered her the chance to propose
solutions on a global scale using policy as a tool.
Jeanette thinks that policy is vital
because, once established and executed via the participation of individuals,
organizations, and the government, it gives guidance, consistency,
accountability, efficiency, and clarity on how to handle recognized problems.
GWEC’s global reach, working in over 80 countries around the world in locations
such as Latin America, Europe, Africa, the United States, and Asia, would
expose her to global policy solutions, thereby molding her into a well-rounded
professional capable of understanding finance, supply chain, operations,
strategy, and policy to become a renewable energy industry leader proficient
enough to move the African continent and the world forward into the next
century.
Learning from Previous Experiences
Early in her career, Jeanette had an
experience with a challenging boss that helped shape her for the better. While
she and her boss had conflicting views on various topics, her experience taught
her the importance of coming to mutually acceptable agreements by working
together to create options that satisfy both parties, separating people from
the problem, and focusing on interests, not positions. She shares, “These
lessons were valuable to me because, at the director level, negotiation is a
critical skill required to bridge differences and work together to make a
better world for all via aligning mutually beneficial positions.”
Key to Attain Balance
Jeanette has discovered the power of saying
no and engaging in activities that correspond with her personal priorities in
order to preserve balance in her personal and professional life. These
priorities are assessed yearly when she takes a couple of days each year to
reflect on the positive and negative experiences she has had over the year
while looking forward. Because family is such an essential part of her life,
she strives to organize her calendar around that goal.
Jeanette also contributes her time and
resources to service-related activities, such as mentoring and volunteering
with the Angel Centre for Abandoned Children, Habitat for Humanity, and
Operation Smile, which are her passion projects. In terms of how she keeps
herself and her team motivated to provide the best services possible, Jeanette
provides five techniques that have helped her and her team stay motivated to
provide the best services possible:
- Connect: either as a group or as an individual, because
connecting with colleagues is essential to maintaining and developing
high-performing teams.
- Show interest in colleagues: In her experience, learning about
your team’s interests and ambitions allows her to create a healthy balance
of work that must be done, work that each colleague is interested in, and
offer development opportunities that are tailored to each individual.
- Display gratitude regularly and frequently.
- Bring joy to the workplace, such as celebrating milestones,
weddings, and birthdays while standing with a colleague during a
challenging time.
- Practice what you preach.
Personal and Professional Goals
Jeanette envisions the GWEC secretariat
being a leader in taking bold action to put the energy transition on track and
secure energy security. The present worldwide power crisis, precipitated by the
Ukraine conflict, has highlighted the persistent hazards of relying on fossil
fuels for the world’s energy supply.
Power and gasoline prices have reached
all-time highs, exposing consumers and economies to inflation and driving up
living costs. She references the International Energy Agency’s Global Energy
Review: CO2 Emissions in 2021 report which reveals that 2021 saw a historic
high in global CO2 emissions, putting the goals of the Paris Agreement at risk.
As a remedy, the world will need to make a dramatic shift away from reliance on
fossil fuels and toward renewables, through a concentrated and rapid effort by
individuals, organizations, and governments if the world is to have any hope of
keeping global warming to 1.5°C (34.7 °F) or even 2°C (35.6 °F) as per
recommendations by the first installment of the Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change’s AR6 report.
Jeanette’s personal aims as a company
leader are to help this transformation while ensuring that the voices of the
least, lost, and forgotten are included in the climate change discourse long
after her job in the industry is completed.