<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\nAndy Marsh has focused on power supply issues since his college days, when Professors Brian Butz, Edward Calhoun and Victor Schutz sparked his interest in how to best power electronics. An introduction by Butz led Marsh to his first job with AT&T and Bell Laboratories, where \u2013 during the firm\u2019s transformation into Lucent Technologies \u2013 Marsh rose to become director of research and development.<\/p>\n
In 2001, Marsh co-founded Valere Power in a Dallas suburb with a sophisticated concept he was developing to provide direct-current systems to power broadband server and storage applications. With Marsh as its CEO, the company grew into a multi-national operation with more than 200 employees and annual revenues of more than $100 million from customers such as Verizon and Time-Warner. \u201cWe were probably powering 80 percent of the broadband applications in the country by 2008,\u201d says Marsh.<\/p>\n
That year, after a $250 million sale of the company was finalized, Plug Power of Latham, New York (near Albany) recruited Marsh to become its president and CEO. Today, as an alternative to diesel engines or lead-[acid] batteries, Plug Power is powering lift trucks with hydrogen fuel cells for customers such as Walmart, Kroger, BMW and P&G.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe\u2019ve taken a technology concept and created a market where none ever existed,\u201d says the Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, native.<\/p>\n
During a recent 18-month period, the firm\u2019s market capitalization grew from $10 million to $900 million. In its largest deal so far, Walmart is paying approximately $50 million to convert seven of its distribution centers to hydrogen fuel cells. Instead of taking 15 minutes to replace 2,000-3,000-pound batteries every six hours, it takes only two minutes to refuel a hydrogen [fuel] cell. Workers at Walmart\u2019s Pottsville, Pennsylvania, facility are now accomplishing in seven hours what used to require eight hours. \u201cWhat we\u2019re really selling is productivity,\u201d Marsh says.<\/p>\n
With hydrogen stored outside, the need for large interior battery storage areas also has been eliminated, and the technology helps companies meet greenhouse gas reduction goals.<\/p>\n
\u201cI also earned degrees from Duke (MS EE \u201987) and SMU (MBA \u201998), but I really learned the fundamentals of engineering quite well at Temple,\u201d says Marsh. \u201cI don\u2019t think I could have done anything in my career unless I had received that training to be a skilled engineer.<\/p>\n
\u201cAnd a lot of business involves dealing with practical issues and engaging with other people. The Temple student body is really diverse, and there\u2019s value in not just being with people who think like you.\u201d<\/p>\n
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Plug Power CEO Andy Marsh Featured in \u2018Temple Engineering\u2019 Newsletter - Plug Power<\/title>\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n\t \n\t \n\t \n