Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners
Lisa Engelen is a seasoned finance professional with extensive experience in investment and analysis roles. Currently serving as Vice President at Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners since June 2018, Lisa has progressed through various positions, starting as an Analyst in the UK investment team. Prior to joining Quinbrook, Lisa held analyst positions at Pixoneye and Credit Suisse, focusing on the Technology, Media, and Telecoms sector. Lisa's early career included a summer analyst role at Credit Suisse’s RTMT team and tutoring roles in mathematics and economics, showcasing a commitment to education and mentorship. Lisa holds a Master’s degree in Climate Change, Management, and Finance from Imperial College Business School and a Bachelor's degree in Management from The London School of Economics.
This person is not in the org chart
This person is not in any offices
Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners
Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners (‘Quinbrook’) is a specialist investment manager focused exclusively on lower carbon and renewable energy infrastructure investment and operational asset management in the US, UK and Australia. Quinbrook is led and managed by a senior team of power industry professionals who have collectively invested over US$ 8.2 billion in energy infrastructure assets since the early 1990’s, representing over 19.5GW of power supply capacity. Our team brings an industrial perspective to investing in low carbon and renewables infrastructure. Quinbrook's investment and asset management team has offices in New York, Houston, London, Jersey, Brisbane and the Gold Coast of Australia. We believe better Stewardship and deliberate ESG risk and impact practices are inherently tied to both capital protection and value growth. Quinbrook invests across the technology landscape encompassing distributed scale solar PV, onshore wind, battery storage, biomass, fugitive methane recovery, demand response, power-to-x, grid support and flexibility, community energy networks, EV charging and ‘Virtual Power Plants’.