In this ACORE Power Perspectives episode, we sit down with Jade Garrett, the founder of Positive Deviancy.
Alex Hobson
Team Member
Senior Vice President, Communications
hobson@acore.org
Alex Hobson has been helping shape the clean energy industry’s narrative for nearly 10 years. She currently leads ACORE’s communications department, overseeing the organization’s internal and external communications, media relations, digital and social media efforts, and brand management.
Prior to joining ACORE, Alex was the director of external communications for the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), where she served as a spokesperson for the solar industry, managing SEIA’s earned media, video production and various communications campaigns. Before moving to the nation’s capital, Alex was an award-winning broadcast journalist, working in several TV markets throughout the state of Florida.
She graduated with highest honors from the University of Florida.
Featured Work
ACORE Power Perspectives with Peter Colavito
In this ACORE Power Perspectives episode, we sit down with the Executive Director of Invest in Our Future, Peter Colavito, to learn more about unlocking federal clean energy investment nationwide.
ACORE Power Perspectives with Ray Long
In this episode, we welcome ACORE President and CEO Ray Long into the hot seat. It’s time to get to know the people shaping America’s energy landscape.
ACORE Power Perspectives with Jael Holzman
In ACORE Power Perspectives Episode 2, we sit down with Jael Holzman, a Washington, D.C.-based climate journalist and punk rock musician.
ACORE Power Perspectives with David Crane
Our first interview is with industry veteran, David Crane, the Under Secretary for Infrastructure at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE).
This Earth Day, ACORE is Urging the Biden Administration’s Commerce Department to Correct Course so Climate Progress Can Continue
There has never been a more important time to rally in defense of our planet than now. The 52nd Earth Day comes mere weeks after a landmark report from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change identified that “without immediate and deep emissions reductions across all sectors, limiting global warming to 1.5°C is beyond reach.”