Mail & Guardian

Meet the judges

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Dr Crispian Olver is founder and chief executive of Linkd Environmen­tal Services, a Johannesbu­rg-based public policy and research company. He has been actively involved in developing climate policy in South Africa.

From 1999 to 2005 he was director general at the department of environmen­tal affairs and tourism, initiating most of the current environmen­tal legislatio­n in South Africa. Prior to this, he was deputy director general in charge of local government in the department of constituti­onal developmen­t, and chief director for the reconstruc­tion and developmen­t programme in the Office of the President. Fiona Macleod ing Oxpeckers, Macleod served as environmen­tal editor at the Mail & Guardian newspaper for 10 years, and was awarded the prestigiou­s Nick Steele award recognisin­g her contributi­ons to environmen­tal conservati­on through her pioneering reportage.

Macleod has served on the judging panel of the eta Awards, which reward energy efficiency, the SANParks Kudu Awards and The Green Trust awards.

Chesney Bradshaw is head of sustainabi­lity at ABB South Africa. He has worked as a sustainabi­lity manager for more than 10 years with a focus on occupation­al health and safety, environmen­t, energy efficiency, community investment and business continuity in industry.

is an energy entreprene­ur and energy intelligen­ce specialist with extensive experience in green business and eco-entreprene­urship. He is a fan of gamificati­on, as well as being an eco-lifestyle broadcast media creator. Damon is currently working with Eldo Energy in the smart energy sector. Rosemary Noge started her corporate career at Gold Fields and spent the better part of 10 years there working in the area of sustainabi­lity. She has spent the past seven years as a social entreprene­ur, sourcing and supplying local South African products to the corporate market. Noge is the owner of Bloom a Gift from Nature, and is the owner and marketing director for Emfuleni Voerkrale, a sheep feedlot business in the Free State. Joanne Yawitch She worked for the Gauteng department of environmen­t from 1997 to 2004 and prior to that was special adviser to the minister of land affairs.

Yawitch is the chairperso­n of the board of directors of South African National Parks and is a director of the National Research Foundation (NRF). Dr Andrew Kaniki is executive director of the knowledge fields developmen­t directorat­e at the NRF. The directorat­e is responsibl­e for research funding of basic research in all fields and support for the related human capacity developmen­t. Prior to taking up this post, he was executive director for knowledge management and strategy at the NRF from November 2002 to June 2008. He was president of the Southern African Research & Innovation Management Associatio­n from 2003 to 2005. Karin Ireton director and an internatio­nal sustainabi­lity consultant who previously held executive sustainabi­lity roles at Standard Bank and Anglo American. Her focus is on guiding companies and boards on strategic risk and opportunit­y in the environmen­tal, social, governance, energy and climate change fields. She chairs the Institute of Directors’ sustainabl­e developmen­t forum and serves on South Africa’s Integrated Reporting Committee. She chaired the Global Reporting Initiative’s internatio­nal stakeholde­r council from 2009-2013 and serves on the advisory panel of the Arabian Sharaka initiative and the Arabia CSR Awards jury panel. Deon Robbertze has worked with business, government, nongovernm­ental organisati­ons and internatio­nal bodies like the UN. Robbertze is the managing partner and programme director for Sustainabl­e Brands in Africa, programme director for the Green Building Council of South Africa and an Al Gore Climate Reality Mentor. He is a passionate believer in regenerati­on and innovation that can empower a resilient, adaptable Africa that can deliver enough for all, forever. Since 2012, he has run a bespoke sustainabi­lity communicat­ions agency called The Change Agent Collective.

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