Jerusalem Post’s List of Most Influential Jews of 2013

Yosef Abramowitz President of Arava Power comes in at number 44. Israel's solar energy pioneer makes the list for the third year in a row, finding himself among good company alongside Vagina Monologues play write Eve Ensler, Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat and Dr. Ruth Westheimer.

Arava Power Company co-founder Yosef Abramowitz

Over the past year, Israel’s legendary “Captain Sunshine” Yosef Abramowitz has upgraded his vision of simply creating a solar powered Jewish state to harnessing energy from the sun’s rays for the vaster developing world.

As an immigrant to Israel from Boston, Abramowitz, 49, co-founded the Arava Power Company in 2006 with Ed Hofland and David Rosenblatt, bringing about the establishment of Israel’s first medium-sized solar field in 2011, at Kibbutz Ketura.

While Arava Power continues to expand a series of Israeli solar projects in the pipeline – including a large solar field across the street from Ketura and a medium-sized field in a Negev Beduin community – Abramowitz and his partners decided to aim beyond the state’s borders. In October, they launched the Jerusalem-based firm Energiya Global, which is already developing a utility-scale photovoltaic facility at Rwanda’s Agahozo-Shalom Youth Village, a commercial solar field in the Galapagos island of San Cristobal and an eight-megawatt site in Romania.

Recognizing his status as an American-Israeli solar pioneer, CNN named him one of six global green pioneers in 2012, and a 30-minute program on his life was featured on Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s The Next Last series earlier this month.

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Techonomy and the Solar Solution

It is not immediately obvious, if the unfinished, unpainted and sparse decor is any indication, that a handful of guys in jeans, t-shirts and sandals are changing the world - but they are. On the 26th floor of Google Israel's offices in Tel Aviv, Techonomy's David Kirkpatrick tells a roomful of entrepreneurs how technology is changing the face of the future. While participants taste a cake made on a 3-D printer, a panel consisting of Yosef Abramowitz of Energiya Global, Guy Rolnick of Israel's business magazine The Marker, and Modi Rosen of Magma Venture Partners field questions related to the conference's theme "Can Israel be the Tech Capital for the next Five Billion?"

Apparently the answer is maybe. While it is clear that there is no lack of ingenuity, risk-taking, brains or even capital, Israel still loses many start-up success stories to its closest competitor, Silicon Valley. While the start-up nation can't keep every hi-tech seed company that germinates in the Holy Land, we do have a unique perspective to offer as a world leader in cutting edge global technological change.

Taking Energiya Global's example of exporting clean, renewable energy to developing nations, Israel's high tech can do more to take its addiction to technological advance and embrace and export the moral obligation to help improve people's lives.

This conference, held in an interactive, participatory format embodied today's new business model that is based on a new dynamic type of conversation. The new conversation is one that engages the people, taking opinion and folding it into a future we are shaping ourselves.

One way you can participate in this conversation is by investing with socially responsible companies that are working to save the planet. Your money serves as your voice and your vote that says yes to renewable energy in the world's emerging green energy markets.

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Yosef Abramowitz Named as One of the Top 50 Most Influential Jews 2013 by The Jerusalem Post

Over the past year, Israel’s legendary “Captain Sunshine” Yosef Abramowitz has upgraded his vision of simply creating a solar powered Jewish state to harnessing energy from the sun’s rays for the vaster developing world.

Recognizing his status as an American-Israeli solar pioneer, CNN named him one of six global green pioneers in 2012, and a 30-minute program on his life was featured on Dr. Sanjay Gupta’s The Next Last series earlier this month.

Read The Complete Story On JPost.com

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CNN’s The Next List Features Solar Pioneer Yosef Abramowitz

Dr. Sanjay Gupta, host of CNN’s The Next List, features solar
pioneer Yosef Abramowitz in a nationally televised broadcast across the
United States on May 11, 2013. Abramowitz is the
first Israeli to be featured on a show that profiles “innovators,
visionaries and agents of change.”

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4

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Impact Investing

Hands of the poor
I have found that many of us in the Wexner community wrestle with the call to serve our community and the call to serve humanity. We have been blessed with so much abundance, education, opportunity, and, of course, each other. Is the highest expression of our leadership journeys to serve a largely privileged Jewish community when there is also an infinite need for our leadership in the larger world?

I couldn’t have predicted my unusual journey from the day when Larry Moses informed me that I had won the "Jewish leadership lottery" and I joined Class 3 of the Graduate Fellowship Program to pursue Jewish journalism. My studies at Columbia University, JTS and HUC, complemented by the Leadership Institutes, prepared me well for my work in pioneering Jewish multi-media at the dawn of the Internet age, including sites like MyJewishLearning.com, InterfaithFamily.com, birthrightisrael.com, BabagaNewz.com and the journal Sh’ma. But after spending a very satisfying 15 years innovating the sphere of Jewish media and education, I then abandoned the Jewish people when I made Aliya in 2006. Truth be told, I was burning out. But after a year on Kibbutz Ketura -- reconnecting with my family, with nature, and with my activist spirit -- I was ready for a new challenge.

Over the past seven years I helped co-found Israel’s first solar power developer, built Israel's first commercial solar field, raised more than $300M in funding for future fields, and launched a separate global solar company to help countries throughout the world become energy independent. The two companies hopefully will deploy more than $3 billion in solar energy in the coming years, in Israel and in developing countries, like Rwanda. Since I am a Jewish activist in my DNA, any business enterprise I become involved with needs to have a strong mission return along with the opportunity to reward investors for taking some risk with us. I used to speak to donors about receiving a mission-return on their philanthropic investments. Now I speak to investors about financial returns on their mission-related investments.

Recently, after nearly seven years in exile from Jewish communal life, I have spoken to numerous groups during my investment trips -- I realize I miss the chevrah greatly. Bumping into former colleagues and many of you at various Jewish conferences has rekindled in me a sense of longing for the community that nurtured my values, taught me invaluable leadership skills, and invested in my success. I have been thinking about the question as to whether we have to choose between our Jewish community and the global community, or perhaps there is a new third way.

Here are some thoughts on these matters.

We need a for-profit, Jewish-values-based model that can leverage billions in the service of our global values while providing returns to our communal institutions. At the 2012 General Assembly, Reut convened a series of conversations to discuss how Jews and Israel can impact the lives of a quarter of a billion people on the planet, leveraging Israeli know-how in the developing world. There aren’t enough charitable funds in Jewish life to both sustain Jewish life and help the millions of needy people in the world.

How many Jewish organizations invest according to Jewish values and invest in Israel? How many federations, community foundations and Jewish communal pension funds are invested in oil companies as opposed to renewable energy companies? (I am influenced here by Wexner Heritage Alumna Julie Hammerman, the Jewish Federation of Greater Miami, and Blue Star Index CEO Steven Schoenfeld). The next phase is to engineer new models of not how we deploy the five percent of our proceeds from our endowments for Jewish causes and institutions but how to apply our values to the 95 percent of our funds - many billions of dollars - so that we can be part of something transformative for humanity and ensure healthier returns to reinvest back in the Jewish community. I want to see the returns from renewable energy go back to the Jewish community so that we have more money for Jewish education, for supporting the partnership between Israel and American Jewry and for other good causes. When foundation endowments were stagnant, so was giving to support innovation in Jewish life. With the Israeli stock market out-performing the S & P 500k why are Jews and Jewish institutions shunning the Israeli stock market? (None of our companies are public, so this is not a commercial)

I believe the Jewish people are uniquely poised to save the planet, and in the process, to strengthen our own sense of distinctiveness as a people with purpose. As we approach Shavuot, perhaps we can re-envision the covenant between Jewish leadership and Jewish money in new and strategic ways. I continue to be inspired by and grateful to the Wexner leadership and community for nurturing the next steps in my journey by being able to put forward some of these new questions. Happy Earth Day.

Yosef I. Abramowitz lives in Jerusalem with his wife, Rabbi Susan Silverman, and five children. Yossi co-founded the Arava Power Company, Israel’s first solar power developer, built Israel's first commercial solar field, raised more than $300M in funding for future fields, and launched a separate global solar company to help countries throughout the world become energy independent (Energiya Global). He has been co-nominated 3 times for the Nobel Peace Prize.

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Dr. Sanjay Gupta, host of CNN's The Next List, will feature solar
pioneer Yosef Abramowitz in a nationally televised broadcast across the
United States on Saturday, April 27th, at 2:30pm EST. Abramowitz is the
first Israeli to be featured on a show that profiles “innovators,
visionaries and agents of change."

Abramowitz is credited with co-founding the solar industry in Israel
with his partners David Rosenblatt of New Jersey and Ed Hofland of
Kibbutz Ketura.
Watch the full clip
here: http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2013/04/04/the-next-list-abra
mowitz-preview-1.cnn

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CNN: Green Pioneer Yosef Abramowitz

Cnn logo

Energiya Global's President and CEO, Yosef Abramowitz, was named one of six global Green Pioneers by CNN in 2012 for his work bringing solar energy to Israel and the rest of the world. Watch the video here.

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Energiya Global on Ukraine’s ICTV

Anya Zhuravel, Seth Kessler and Julia Mendel at Ketura Sun

Anya Zhuravel, Director of New Business Development, Seth Kessler, Site Manager at Arava Power's Ketura Sun solar field, and Julia Mendel, ICTV Ukraine TV Producer at Ketura Sun on Kibbutz Ketura.

A Ukrainian TV crew visited Arava Power's solar field at Kibbutz Ketura and then stopped by our office in Jerusalem last week to learn about renewable energy - now we are now famous in the Ukraine! Even if you don't speak the language, the images speak for themselves. Check it out!

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2 kw Test Site Installed in Rwanda

first-panel-rwanda-2Lots of excitement today at Energiya Global as our President and CEO, Yosef Abramowitz (aka Captain Sunshine), his daughter, and students from the Agahozo-Shalom Youth Village (www.asyv.org) inaugurate the 2 kilowatt test system installed at our site in Rwanda.

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Jewish Business News: Yosef’s 7-Year Dream

Jewish Business News logo

Today in the online news magazine Jewish Business News is an amazing feature on Energiya Global's President and CEO Yosef Abramowitz and his vision for the company... and the world.

From the article:

“This time,” Abramowitz says, “people are psyched. The Jewish people has a historic opportunity both to profit and bring low-cost electricity to the developing world, as well as alleviate global warming by halting the use of fossil fuels. This venture will strengthen the Israeli ‘brand’ as a leader in development and entrepreneurship, in turn bolstering our diplomatic standing.”

Meanwhile, EGC has identified 70 countries interested in building solar fields within their borders. By the second quarter of 2013, fields will be under construction in the Galapagos Islands, Romania and Rwanda.

“Many countries are lacking electricity,” Abramowitz said. “Our field in Rwanda will produce five megawatts. Maybe we can even double that. That would mean supplying 10% of all Rwanda’s electricity consumption!”

Read the entire article, entitled "Yosef's 7-Year Dream".

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