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The Alaska
World Affairs Council
Presents
Robert
Ebel

"What
US Energy Policy Should Be"
Friday,
18th April, 2008 – Hilton
Hotel
Doors open at 11:30 a.m. -
Program begins at 12:00 p.m.
For Reservations
RSVP by Wednesday, 16th
April to the Alaska World
Affairs Council
by telephone 276-8038 or by
email to
AlaskaWorldAffairs.org
.
Lunch Program $20 for
Members - $25 for
Non-Members - $6 for Coffee
Only
Robert Ebel
is a senior adviser in the
CSIS Energy Program, where
he offers views on world oil
and energy issues, with
particular emphasis on the
former Soviet Union and the
Persian Gulf. Previously, he
served with the CIA for 11
years and spent over 7 years
with the Office of Oil and
Gas in the U.S. Department
of the Interior. He also
worked with the Federal
Energy Office in the
international energy area.
Earlier, he worked for
ENSERCH Corporation, which
he joined as vice president
in March 1974, serving for
some 14 years, advising the
corporation and its
subsidiaries on
international issues
relevant to day-to-day
operations.
Ebel has traveled widely in
the former Soviet Union and
was a member of the first
U.S. oil delegation to visit
the country in 1960; in
1970, he was part of the
first group of Americans to
inspect the new oil fields
of Western Siberia. In
November 1997, he led an
International Energy Agency
team examining the oil and
gas sector of Turkmenistan
and Uzbekistan. In August
2002, Ebel participated in
the Sudanese peace talks,
held in Machakos, Kenya, and
from December 2002 through
April 2003, he worked with a
group of former Iraqi oil
officials, under the
Department of State “Future
of Iraq” project, to produce
an assessment of the Iraqi
oil sector.
Ebel is a past chairman of
the Washington Export
Council and past member of
the board of American Near
East Refugee Aid. He
received the Department of
State’s Distinguished Public
Service Award in April 2002.
He holds an M.A. in
international relations from
the Maxwell School at
Syracuse University and a
B.S. in petroleum geology
from Texas Tech. A graduate
of the USAF Russian language
program, he served in Air
Force intelligence during
the Korean War.
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