
Profiles & Interviews
CNBC Street Fight: Landmark Climate Bill
06/26/2009 CNBC
Clearing the Air
Fred Krupp comments on the administration's decision to move up the deadline for tougher fuel emissions standards to 2016.
06/09/2009 NBC Nightly News
News & Publications
Fred Krupp's Remarks to the Point Carbon Conference
11/02/2009 Article
Statement of EDF President Fred Krupp on House Passage of the American Clean Energy and Security Act
06/26/2009 Press Release
Speaking Engagements
- World Innovation Forum 05/06/2009
- Edison Electric Institute (EEI) Annual Convention 06/24/2009
- Virtual Energy Forum 06/25/2009
- The Atlantic Green Intelligence Forum 09/16/2009
Videos
EEI Convention 06/24/09
Fred Krupp delivers keynote address
Fred Krupp
President
Work
In his 25 years as head of Environmental Defense Fund, Fred Krupp has overseen the growth of EDF from a small nonprofit with budget of $3 million into a recognized worldwide leader in the environmental movement. Under his direction, EDF’s full-time staff has increased from 50 to 350, membership has expanded from 40,000 to more than 500,000 and new offices have opened in Raleigh, Austin, Boston, Sacramento and Beijing, China.
Krupp is widely recognized as the foremost champion of harnessing market forces for environmental ends, such as the market-based acid rain reduction plan in the 1990 Clean Air Act that The Economist hailed as “the greatest green success story of the past decade.” Today, this approach has become the leading model for solving the problem of global warming.
Krupp broke new ground by engaging American companies to lessen their impact on the environment. Strategic partnerships with McDonald’s, FedEx, and DuPont, among others, have resulted in the elimination of millions of pounds of waste, the adoption of hybrid delivery vehicles, and an accord to reduce the environmental risks of nanotechnology.
He also helped launch a corporate coalition, the U.S. Climate Action Partnership, whose Fortune 500 members—Alcoa, BP, Caterpillar, GE and dozens more—have called for strict limits on global warming pollution. The New York Times says, “Krupp has made a career of successfully pushing companies to make tough environmental changes.” (Environmental Defense Fund accepts no payments or contributions from its partners.)
Krupp is coauthor, with Miriam Horn, of New York Times Best Seller, Earth: The Sequel – The Race to Reinvent Energy and Stop Global Warming, published in March 2008 by W.W. Norton. The book offers a behind-the-scenes look at the inventors and entrepreneurs developing new clean-energy technologies that could transform the multi-trillion-dollar world energy economy and solve global warming.
Background
Educated at Yale and the University of Michigan Law School, Fred Krupp lives with his family in Connecticut. An avid rower, he won a gold medal in the 2006 world rowing championship sponsored by FISA, the international rowing federation. He has been profiled in The Wall Street Journal and


