EET Hydrogen
Philip Porat, CFA, is a finance and corporate development professional with a diverse background in investment analysis and corporate strategy. Currently working at EET Hydrogen, Philip is involved in a pioneering blue hydrogen project within the HyNet Cluster. Prior experience includes serving as Corporate Development Director at Adarga, where leadership was provided for capital raising initiatives and direct collaboration was established with the CEO and Board of Directors. Philip's tenure at Matchpoint Capital Inc. involved conducting in-depth due diligence for investments including significant acquisitions in the financial sector. Previous roles at Picton Mahoney Asset Management focused on high-yield securities, while work at Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan involved managing a substantial equity portfolio. Beginning a career as an analyst at RBC Capital Markets, Philip contributed to major mergers and acquisitions, developing key financial models for transactions valued at C$54 billion. Philip holds a Bachelor of Commerce with a major in finance from McGill University.
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EET Hydrogen
EET Hydrogen is a leading player in the energy transition and is developing the first large scale, low carbon hydrogen production hub in the UK. By 2030, we’re aiming to deliver nearly 4GW of low carbon hydrogen – 40% of the UK Government’s target. We’re investing £1bn in the UK’s largest industrial region (the North-West) to enable businesses to switch from fossil fuels to low carbon energy, helping to secure and grow vital industries and jobs and unlocking billions of pounds of related investment. An integral part of HyNet, one of two UK Government’s Track 1 clusters for industrial decarbonisation, EET Hydrogen’s HPP1 plant (350MW capacity) was selected as one of two initial large low carbon hydrogen plants in the UK. HPP2 will be the largest low carbon hydrogen plant in the UK producing up to 1,000MW – enough to power the city of Liverpool. The initial HPP1 and HPP2 plants will capture around 2.5 million tonnes of carbon per annum – equivalent to taking 1.1 million cars off the roads.