Bio
Sharlissa Moore, PhD, MS, works at the intersection of energy, equity, and climate change. For more than a decade, she has led research and policy analysis on energy and climate systems, with significant interdisciplinary experience, including research on clean energy deployment, environmental justice, and socioeconomic analyses.
Sharlissa is a collaborative team leader who thoughtfully guides teams through the process of planning, executing, and disseminating consistent, high-quality, and non-ideological research that is appropriate and actionable for the intended audience. Sharlissa plays a constructive bridging role across a range of communities, including residents, policymakers, the energy industry, environmental groups, academic, and the investment community, translating knowledge across stakeholders, disciplines, and sectors.
Sharlissa has extensively published across the fields of energy policy, climate change, and security and equitable energy transitions. Publications include a peer-reviewed article on controversy over land use and utility-scale solar power development, including endangered species and rare plants, on federal lands in California. She has conducted research for Ford Motors that assessed emerging issues around repurposing electric vehicle batteries for home energy storage, including survey research later integrated by colleagues into engineering models. She is currently finishing a report on policies for multi-use land and pollinator habitat for solar development on agricultural lands, with collaboration from a large solar developer. Sharlissa has also assessed the impacts of Moroccan solar energy policy and the local community and of proposals to develop roadway charging for electric vehicles.
Key skills relate to climate change and energy policy, distributed and centralized solar power, energy justice and equity, grant application and management, remanufactured battery storage, renewable energy, science and technology (R&D policy), and stakeholder engagement.
Technical and software skills include Atlas.ti (including cloud), NVivor, MAXQDA, Asana, Evernote, Microsoft Teams, Slack, Things, Adobe Creative Cloud (Acrobat DC, Premiere Pro, After Effects), Microsoft Office, Google G-Suite, Zotero, Mendeley, Tableau, and Qualtrics.
Check out her new book: Sustainable Energy Transformations, Power, and Politics: Morocco and the Mediterranean.
Sharlissa Moore, PhD, MS, works at the intersection of energy, equity, and climate change. For more than a decade, she has led research and policy analysis on energy and climate systems, with significant interdisciplinary experience, including research on clean energy deployment, environmental justice, and socioeconomic analyses.
Sharlissa is a collaborative team leader who thoughtfully guides teams through the process of planning, executing, and disseminating consistent, high-quality, and non-ideological research that is appropriate and actionable for the intended audience. Sharlissa plays a constructive bridging role across a range of communities, including residents, policymakers, the energy industry, environmental groups, academic, and the investment community, translating knowledge across stakeholders, disciplines, and sectors.
Sharlissa has extensively published across the fields of energy policy, climate change, and security and equitable energy transitions. Publications include a peer-reviewed article on controversy over land use and utility-scale solar power development, including endangered species and rare plants, on federal lands in California. She has conducted research for Ford Motors that assessed emerging issues around repurposing electric vehicle batteries for home energy storage, including survey research later integrated by colleagues into engineering models. She is currently finishing a report on policies for multi-use land and pollinator habitat for solar development on agricultural lands, with collaboration from a large solar developer. Sharlissa has also assessed the impacts of Moroccan solar energy policy and the local community and of proposals to develop roadway charging for electric vehicles.
Key skills relate to climate change and energy policy, distributed and centralized solar power, energy justice and equity, grant application and management, remanufactured battery storage, renewable energy, science and technology (R&D policy), and stakeholder engagement.
Technical and software skills include Atlas.ti (including cloud), NVivor, MAXQDA, Asana, Evernote, Microsoft Teams, Slack, Things, Adobe Creative Cloud (Acrobat DC, Premiere Pro, After Effects), Microsoft Office, Google G-Suite, Zotero, Mendeley, Tableau, and Qualtrics.
Check out her new book: Sustainable Energy Transformations, Power, and Politics: Morocco and the Mediterranean.