menu
SolarCheri
CEO, Founder at Indigenous Energy Initiative
Fort Pierce, Florida, United States
“The self-determination, resilience, and innovation of Indigenous people”
bio
Chéri’s experience in mitigating climate change and restoring economies with the power of renewable energy spans two decades. Her focus areas are solar Capacity Building, Project and Program Development, Policy, Finance and Workforce Development. A descendant of the Mi’Kmaq Nation, she has made it her life’s work to leverage this expertise for the benefit of indigenous American communities. At SolarCity, Chéri led workforce development and training initiatives, as well as the coordination of community, academic, and government stakeholders in the massive effort to identify and train the 1,400 employees of the 1 GW solar manufacturing plant in Buffalo, NY, and 10,000 employees for Tesla’s Battery Gigafactory in Nevada, the largest factory in the world. From 2009 – 2015, Chéri was in private practice, providing renewable energy and energy efficiency project consulting services to colleges, universities, and governments, including the Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC), New York State Energy Research & Development Authority (NYSERDA), and US Department of Energy SunShot initiatives: Solar Ready Vets, Solar Instructor Training Network, and Solar Career Map. From 2005 – 2009, Chéri served as Director of Education & Outreach for the American Council On Renewable Energy, where she developed and managed ACORE’s corporate, educational, and citizen-outreach programs, on an international level. Chéri is a 2023 MIT Indigenous Communities Fellow, a Cordes Fellow, and a Climate Leader, trained by former Vice President, Al Gore. She serves as an Advisor to the Yale School of Business and the Environment, and previously served as an Advisory Board member for the Masters in Renewable Energy degree program at Penn State, and as a Buffalo & Erie County Workforce Investment Board Director. A self-described child of the sea, Chéri lives on the shore with her family on the ancestral homelands of both the Narragansett and Seminole in present-day Rhode Island and Florida.
“The self-determination, resilience, and innovation of Indigenous people”
bio
Chéri’s experience in mitigating climate change and restoring economies with the power of renewable energy spans two decades. Her focus areas are solar Capacity Building, Project and Program Development, Policy, Finance and Workforce Development. A descendant of the Mi’Kmaq Nation, she has made it her life’s work to leverage this expertise for the benefit of indigenous American communities. At SolarCity, Chéri led workforce development and training initiatives, as well as the coordination of community, academic, and government stakeholders in the massive effort to identify and train the 1,400 employees of the 1 GW solar manufacturing plant in Buffalo, NY, and 10,000 employees for Tesla’s Battery Gigafactory in Nevada, the largest factory in the world. From 2009 – 2015, Chéri was in private practice, providing renewable energy and energy efficiency project consulting services to colleges, universities, and governments, including the Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC), New York State Energy Research & Development Authority (NYSERDA), and US Department of Energy SunShot initiatives: Solar Ready Vets, Solar Instructor Training Network, and Solar Career Map. From 2005 – 2009, Chéri served as Director of Education & Outreach for the American Council On Renewable Energy, where she developed and managed ACORE’s corporate, educational, and citizen-outreach programs, on an international level. Chéri is a 2023 MIT Indigenous Communities Fellow, a Cordes Fellow, and a Climate Leader, trained by former Vice President, Al Gore. She serves as an Advisor to the Yale School of Business and the Environment, and previously served as an Advisory Board member for the Masters in Renewable Energy degree program at Penn State, and as a Buffalo & Erie County Workforce Investment Board Director. A self-described child of the sea, Chéri lives on the shore with her family on the ancestral homelands of both the Narragansett and Seminole in present-day Rhode Island and Florida.