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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alan Finkel
8th Chief Scientist of Australia
In office
25 January 2016 – 31 December 2020
Preceded byIan Chubb
Succeeded byCathy Foley
Personal details
Born
Alan Simon Finkel

(1953-01-17) 17 January 1953 (age 71)
NationalityAustralian
SpouseElizabeth Finkel
EducationMount Scopus Memorial College
Alma materMonash University
OccupationElectrical engineer
ProfessionNeuroscientist

Alan Simon Finkel AC FAA FTSE[1][2] (born 17 January 1953) is an Australian neuroscientist, inventor, researcher, entrepreneur, educator, policy advisor, and philanthropist. He was Australia’s Chief Scientist from 2016 to 2020.[3] Prior to his appointment, his career included Chancellor of Monash University, President of the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE), and CEO and founder of Axon Instruments, and CTO for the electric car start-up Better Place Australia.[4]

Among his current roles, Finkel is Special Adviser to the Australian Government on Low Emissions Technologies, Chair of Australia's Low Emissions Technology Investment Advisory Council, and Chair of Stile Education. In March 2021, he published his quarterly essay, Getting to Zero,[5] which received widespread acclaim.

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  • 2019 Research Excellence Summit: Alan Finkel interview
  • Launch of CAIDE – Dr Alan Finkel AO
  • Alan Finkel

Transcription

Education

Finkel has a Bachelor of Electrical Engineering (Honours) and PhD in Electrical Engineering from Monash University.

Career

Research

After receiving his doctorate in electrical engineering, Finkel worked for two years as a neuroscience Research Fellow at the John Curtin School of Medical Research at the Australian National University. His research investigated the electrical and chemical transmission between brain cells in mammalian spinal cord and brain ganglia, and he developed a revolutionary measurement approach – the Discontinuous Single-Electrode Voltage Clamp.[6]

Commercial enterprises

Axon Instruments

In 1983, Finkel founded Axon Instruments Inc, in Silicon Valley, California.[7] A developer of software, electronic precision amplifiers, and robotic screening instruments for cellular neurosciences, genomics, and pharmaceutical drug discovery, Axon Instruments supplied universities, medical research institutes, biotechnology companies, and pharmaceutical companies, predominantly in the USA, Europe, Japan, and Australia. Finkel was CEO from 1983 until the company was sold for $140 million in 2004 to the Molecular Devices Corporation, and was involved in hands-on design or management of most of the company’s products. Axon Instruments co-founded Optiscan Imaging Limited in 1994, and Finkel served as a director until 2002.

Finkel stayed on at Molecular Devices Corporation for 18 months as the Senior Vice President for Global Engineering, the Chief Technology Officer, and a member of the board of directors. During this period he invented the Population Patch Clamp[8] which aided rapid drug discovery at pharmaceutical companies.

Cosmos Magazine

Finkel co-founded Cosmos Media Pty Ltd to publish the science publication COSMOS Magazine in 2004. He served as the Executive Publisher of Cosmos Media until he and his wife, Elizabeth, gifted it to the Royal Institution of Australia.

Better Place Australia

From 2009 to 2012, Finkel served as Chief Technology Officer at the electric car charge network company Better Place Australia.

Stile Education

In 2012, Finkel co-founded and Chaired Stile Education, Australia’s leading provider of science curriculum materials to schools.

Appointments

Finkel is a Fellow of several professional bodies, including the Australian Academy of Technology and Engineering (ATSE), the Australian Academy of Science (AAS), the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences (AAHMS), ASEAN Academy of Engineering and Technology (AAET), the US National Academy of Inventors (NAI, Engineers Australia (IEAust), the US Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and the Royal Society of Victoria.

Finkel developed, led, and provided initial funding for the Australian Course in Advanced Neuroscience (ACAN),[9] an advanced, intensive three-week course for young scientists. He also served on the Board and as the Chair of the National Research Centre for Prevention of Child Abuse at Monash University for two years, became the inaugural Chair of the ARC Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics, and the Foundation Chair of the Program Steering Committee for the Australian Government’s Securing Australia’s Future (SAF) project. The three-year, $10 million project provided Australia’s Chief Scientist and the Prime Minister’s Science, Engineering, and Innovation Council with evidence to develop new policies. In 2013, he was elected president of the Australian Academy of Technological Science and Engineering (ATSE). [10]

Chancellor of Monash University

In 2008, Finkel commenced as Chancellor of Monash University, the first alumnus of the University to become Chancellor. He held the position for eight years.[11]

Chief Scientist of Australia

Finkel was appointed Australia’s Chief Scientist in 2016. In that capacity, he provided high-level independent advice to the Prime Minister and other Ministers on science, technology and innovation.

As Chief Scientist, Alan was a member or chair of many authorities and programs, including Chair of the Prime Minister’s Prize Selection Committee; member of the National Climate Science Advisory Committee; member of the Climate Change Authority; member of the ARC Engagement and Impact Steering Committee; member of the National Data Advisory Committee; Chair of the Critical Technologies Advisory Group; Executive Officer of the National Science and Technology Council; Deputy Chair of Innovation and Science Australia; member of the ARC Research Priorities Panel; member of the Human Rights Commission Expert Working Group on Human Rights and Digital Technologies; member of Male Champions of Change in STEM.

Low emissions technology

One of his major contributions as Chief Scientist was to Australia’s energy and low emissions technology policies, with a major review in 2017 into the National Electricity Market[12] and a 2018 report titled ‘Hydrogen for Australia’s Future’.[13] His vision in that report was unanimously agreed to by Australian Commonwealth, State and Territory governments. Finkel has stated that Australia should be open to discussing nuclear electricity as a zero-emission energy source.[14]

COVID-19 initiatives

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Finkel took the lead on three major projects: a strategy to ensure Australia would have enough ventilators to cope with the possibly overwhelming number of COVID-19 patients in intensive care; developing the Rapid Research Information Forum (RRIF), for providing expert scientific evidence to the government in response to specific concerns; and a review of the testing, contact tracing, and outbreak management capabilities of all Australian states and territories.

During his time as Chief Scientist, Finkel also led or co-led about a dozen reviews, reports, or strategies for the Australian Government, covering the research and development tax incentive, national research facilities, the innovation system, education, bushfire climate, and disaster resilience.[15] He also participated in more than 700 public engagements, giving countless speeches.[16]

Current roles

At the end of his term as Australia’s Chief Scientist in December 2020, Finkel was invited by the Prime Minister to accept the appointment of a newly created position as Special Adviser to the Australian Government for Low Emissions Technologies, specifically to negotiate mutually beneficial bilateral agreements with the USA, UK, Germany, Japan, South Korea, and Singapore to support demonstration projects for low emissions technologies. He was also asked to continue his role as the Chair of the Low Emissions Technology Investment Advisory Council to develop Australia’s long-term emissions reduction roadmap. He also returned to Chair Stile Education. In July 2022 Finkel will chair an international panel of experts in Sydney at the Indo-Pacific Clean Energy Supply Chain Forum.

Personal life and philanthropy

He is Jewish, the son of a Holocaust survivor.[17]

Alan has been married to science journalist and biochemist Dr Elizabeth Finkel AM since 1982.[18] They have two sons and live in Melbourne.

Alan and Elizabeth undertake a substantial donations program through the Alan and Elizabeth Finkel Foundation. They worked with Monash University to support the Indigenous languages’ preservation program at the University, donating more than $1 million to develop the Wunungu Awara program.[19] Their Foundation has also provided major support to the Australian Neuroscience Society, Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, Austin Health’s Olivia Newton-John Cancer Centre, CSIRO, Florey Neuroscience Institutes, the Koori Heritage Museum, Wesley College, Mount Scopus College, Monash bionic eye research, various Jewish museums, the Jewish National Fund, the John Curtin School of Medical Research, a Chair in Public Health Economics at Monash University, the STELR innovative STEM-teaching program, various PhD scholarships and environmental projects in Indonesia.

Finkel authored the narration of Allan Zavod’s Environmental Symphony. It was recorded by the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra in 2018, with the narration delivered by Sir Richard Branson.[20]

Selected Awards and Recognition

  • 2000: Jack Finlay Award (Australasian Region Board of the Institution of Electrical Engineers – IEE) for a significant contribution to manufacturing in Australasia
  • 2004: R&D 100 Award for the development of the OpusXpress parallel electrophysiology workstation
  • 2005: ATSE Clunies Ross Award for Commercialisation
  • 2006: Member, Order of Australia (AM)
  • 2006: J E Cummins Medal, Royal Society of Victoria
  • 2014: Officer in the Order of Australia (AO), “For distinguished service to science and engineering, and to tertiary education administration, as an advocate for the protection of children, and to philanthropy.”[21]
  • 2015: Winner of the Institution of Engineering and Technology Mountbatten Medal, for his promotion of electronics or information technology and their application.[22]
  • 2015: Elected Fellow of the Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences (FAHMS).[23]
  • 2016: M. A. Sargent Medal
  • 2016: Victorian of the Year
  • 2017: Doctor of Laws, honoris causa, Monash University
  • 2018: Doctor of Letters, honoris causa, Macquarie University
  • 2018: Peter Nicol Russell Memorial Medal, the top award conferred by Engineers Australia. Citation includes “His galaxy of achievements is characterised by the extraordinarily broad spectrum of contributions with impact on the engineering profession, technology and the community.”
  • 2018: Joseph F. Keithley Award In Instrumentation & Measurement, awarded by the IEEE “for contributions to high-speed, accurate measurement of electrical transmission in the brain and other biological cells”.
  • 2018: Included in ‘Top Political Influencer in Business Intelligence in STEM globally’, by Onalytica
  • 2019: IEEE Joseph F. Keithley Award in Instrumentation and Measurement
  • 2019: David Dewhurst Medal for outstanding service to biomedical engineering, bestowed by the Biomedical College of Engineers Australia.
  • 2022: Companion of the Order of Australia (AC) in the 2022 Australia Day Honours for "eminent service to science, to national energy innovation and research infrastructure capability, to climate change and COVID-19 response initiatives, and to science and engineering education".[24]

Selected publications

  • Finkel, Alan (2023). Powering Up: Unleashing the Clean Energy Supply Chain [Black Inc. Books], ISBN 9781760644598
  • Finkel, Alan (March 2021). Getting to Zero. Quarterly Essay.
  • Finkel, Alan (Australia's Chief Scientist); National Press Club Address, Australian Broadcasting Commission, https://iview.abc.net.au/show/national-press-club-address - 12 February 2020[25]
  • Finkel, Alan (19 February 2019). "To move research from quantity to quality, go beyond good intentions". Nature World View. 566 (7744): 297. doi:10.1038/d41586-019-00613-z. PMID 30783294. S2CID 67769458.
  • Finkel, Alan; Australia. Dept. of Education and Training (2017), 2016 National Research Infrastructure Roadmap, [Dept. of Education and Training], ISBN 978-1-76051-015-2
  • Finkel, Alan (2015). "Reflecting on the Future of Work in Australia: Pessimism, Optimism and Opportunities". Proc Royal Society of New South Wales. 148: 125-133.
  • Finkel, Alan (2014). "Powering up Citations". Nature. 511 (7510): pS77. doi:10.1038/511S77a. PMID 25054856. S2CID 4457868.
  • Finkel, Alan (February–March 2014). "Doomsday or boomsday?". Incurable Engineer. Cosmos. 55: 27.
  • Finkel, Alan (2007). "Single Electrode Voltage Clamp". Scholarpedia: 18540.

References

  1. ^ Recognition in Queen’s Birthday Honours
  2. ^ Alan Finkel AM Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, 50 Years of Monash Engineering, Monash University.
  3. ^ http://www.chiefscientist.gov.au/ Australia's Chief Scientist; Sturmer, Jake (17 October 2015). "Simon McKeon takes top job at Monash University". Waverley Leader. Retrieved 20 October 2015.
  4. ^ "Finkel, Alan". Encyclopedia of Australian Science.
  5. ^ Finkel, Alan (March 2021). Getting to Zero. Quarterly Essay.
  6. ^ Finkel, Alan (2007). "Single Electric Voltage Clamp". Scholarpedia. 2 (8): 3528. Bibcode:2007SchpJ...2.3528F. doi:10.4249/scholarpedia.3528.
  7. ^ "Alan Finkel, Chief Scientist" (PDF).
  8. ^ Finkel, Alan (2006). "Population Patch Clamp Improves Data Consistency and Success Rates in the Measurement of Ionic Currents". Journal of Biomolecular Screening. 11 (5): 488–496. doi:10.1177/1087057106288050. PMID 16760372. S2CID 15928870.
  9. ^ "ACAN History".
  10. ^ "Our history". ATSE.
  11. ^ "Dr Alan Finkel AO". Monash University.
  12. ^ Finkel, Alan. "Alan Finkel: How a late-night phonecall in 2016 triggered 'incredible progress' on clean energy". Australian Government. Retrieved 10 December 2020.
  13. ^ "Hydrogen for Australia's Future: A briefing paper for the Australian Energy Council" (PDF). Retrieved 30 August 2018.
  14. ^ Bourke, Latika (28 October 2015). "Chief Scientist Alan Finkel calls for dialogue on alternative energy, including nuclear". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  15. ^ "An Overview of Activities – Australia's Chief Scientist: Jan 2016–Dec 2020". Australian Government.
  16. ^ "The Finkel Files: a compilation of speeches from Australia's Chief Scientist". Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  17. ^ "Finkel Named Victorian of the Year".
  18. ^ Wilmoth, Peter (23 March 2019). "Two of us: Inside the marriage of top scientists Alan and Elizabeth Finkel". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  19. ^ "Language rescue".
  20. ^ "The Environmental Symphony". ABC Music.
  21. ^ "Queens Birthday Honours for ANU Academics". ANU.
  22. ^ "IET Awards - Mountbatten Medal". Archived from the original on 30 August 2017. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  23. ^ "Fellowship | AAHMS – Australian Academy of Health and Medical Sciences". www.aahms.org. Retrieved 26 June 2018.
  24. ^ "Australia Day 2022 Honours List". Sydney Morning Herald. Nine Entertainment Co. 25 January 2022. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
  25. ^ Finkel, Alan. "National Press Club Address". National Press Club. Australian Broadcasting Commission. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
Academic offices
Preceded by
Jerry Ellis
Chancellor of Monash University
2008–2016
Succeeded by
Government offices
Preceded by Chief Scientist of Australia
2016–2020
Succeeded by
This page was last edited on 21 December 2023, at 07:51
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