Leadership

Leadership

CME Leadership

Bill Martin – President, Founder, CEO

Bill is a successful pioneer in two industries. Both fields are bound by a sense of community engagement and enhancement.

For over 45 years, Bill has led CME in the successful development of community-focused, environmentally conscious, award winning Independent Private Power projects in the United States, South America, Europe and North Africa.

Prior to his work in the energy industry, Bill was a co-founder of the STAVROS Independent Living Center, and a leader in nationwide efforts to create an accessible world for people with mobility challenges. This work culminated with the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA.)

The producer of a number of award-winning plays and films, Bill is currently is leading CME’s development of over 4 GWs of Battery Energy Storage projects in New England ISO and PJM.

Ransom Cook – Managing Director

Ransom Cook serves as Vice President in the development of Energy Storage and Renewable Projects in the Northeast where he oversees site control negotiations, all permitting workstreams and CME’s expansion strategy. Since joining the CME team, he has been the lead developer on CME’s ISO-NE BESS portfolio, building a pipeline of 3.7GW, the largest in New England, and successfully transacting on six projects and counting currently totaling 2.135GW, the most in New England.

Prior to joining CME Energy, Ransom had a successful career in the software industry, working as an executive at ThriveHive, HubSpot, and MIT.

Evan Platt – Vice President of Development

Evan Platt is committed to advancing energy infrastructure capacity and enhancing grid stability both in the United States and globally.

He has recently joined CME Energy, to develop grid-scale battery projects in the mid-Atlantic region and Ukraine.

He is the co-founder of Zero Line, a US-based nonprofit organization helping Ukraine’s military collaborate with US and NATO government entities. They support improved intelligence communications and data exchange between frontline units and allied nations. He lived in Ukraine from 2022 to 2024.

Before living in Ukraine, Evan sustained an incomplete spinal cord injury at the cervical level 4 while playing rugby in college. During his physical rehabilitation, he lived and worked in Louisville, Kentucky, at the Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation. He spent over two years there, both as a patient and a researcher. He later pursued his interest in neurotechnology by earning a joint master’s degree from the MIT School of Engineering and the Sloan School of Business.

The Path to CME Energy

Other significant projects in his career included but are not limited to the following:

Forbes Street Solar Project

In 2010, Mr. Martin and CME Energy, in conjunction with Hecate Energy, developed the 3.7 MW Forbes Street Solar Project on a closed landfill in East Providence, Rhode Island, which delivers clean electricity to thousands of people in the state. The project received the 2015 Rhode Island Clean Energy Future Award and was named the best renewable project in the state.

Oregon Clean Energy Center

CME Energy partnered with Pure Energy to form North America Project Development, LLC to develop the Oregon Clean Energy Center, an 869 MW natural gas-fired electric power plant in Oregon, Ohio. The project began construction in November 2014 and is scheduled to begin commercial operations in 2017.

Fremont Energy Center, Ohio

In 1999, CME began development of the Fremont project as a 2×1 combined cycle power plant. CME formed a joint development agreement with CALPINE which bought CME’s interest in 2001. The Fremont Energy Center is a 707 MW facility currently owned and operated by American Municipal Power (AMP).

El Biban Power Plant, Tunisia

CME Energy led the development of the El Biban power project in Zarzis, Tunisia with partners Caterpillar Power Ventures International and Centurion Energy. The 27 MW cogeneration electric power plant was the first independent power project and the first carbon capture power plant in Africa. Gas off of oil wells is captured before it is flared and directed to gas turbines for electrical generation. Ninety-eight percent of the pollution is eliminated while 27 MW of electricity is directed to the grid.

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Advocacy for Disability Awareness

Learn More About Social Responsibility

A Life in Theatre

Apart from his professional activities, Mr. Martin has served on a number of boards and has helped finance the development of a number of successful Off-Broadway plays and documentary films. Having joined its board in 2002, Mr. Martin served as Board Chair of EPIC Theatre Ensemble, a New York-based Off-Broadway, OBIE award-winning theatre organization (www.epictheatrectr.org). Having resigned from the Board in 2014, Mr. Martin continues to fund new play development through EPIC’s annual new play development series.

Notable plays produced by EPIC during Mr. Martin’s period as Chair include OBIE award winning No Child . . ., Sarah Ruhl’s Passion Play, Zak Berkman’s Beauty on the Vine and Judith Thompson’s Palace of the End.

The Kumi and Bill Martin Foundation sponsors the annual new play development series, formerly the Sunshine Series, which has developed a number of new plays including Nilaja Sun’s “No Child . . .”. EPIC is the 2009 winner of the Coming Up Taller award presented by President and Michele Obama for their work in Inner City Schools through the Shakespeare Remix program. EPIC has formed a relationship with one of the independent living foundations Bill founded in the ’70’s, NILP, and together they sponsor a summer theatre program in Lawrence, Mass, where students with severe disabilities create and publically perform their plays.

He is on the boards of the LARK Theatre, the Colorado New Play Festival, and the Decordova Museum Board of Overseers. He co-chairs LARK’s Global Exchange Task Force for new play development in Russia, Mexico, China and the Middle East.

In addition, Mr. Martin has sponsored three award-winning documentaries with film maker Jocelyn Ajami. “Queen of the Gypsies” won the Lincoln Center Award in its Dance in Film series.

Devin Haqq’s “Ambition’s Debt,” which Bill Executive Produced, won Best Feature Film at the 2017 American Black Film Festival.

Mr. Martin and his Potsdam New York teammates are represented in the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto, Canada, thanks to their victory in the first International Pee Wee/Bantam Tournament, the Cradle of Hockey Silver Stick Tournament in 1957. Mr. Martin was the MVP of Potsdam High School’s 1963 New York State championship High School team and played one year at St. Lawrence University, Canton, New York, and four years of football. He recently helped sponsor a hockey team in Canton created for mobility impaired veterans associated with the Society of Military Engineers at Fort Drum, New York.

Mr. Martin is a graduate of Potsdam Central High School, Potsdam, New York. He earned his B.S. from Saint Lawrence University, Canton, New York, and having taken graduate courses at North Carolina A&T University and the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, Mr. Martin earned his master’s degree in 1971. The father of two and grandfather of four, Mr. Martin and his second wife Kumi live in Boston, Massachusetts.

Bill also writes and produces plays and films and has published two books on theatre, The Harassment of Iris Malloy and Project Dawn, thru the Kumi and Bill Martin First Edition Initiative. His plays The Fortunate One, What Bears Dream and Jimmy Crow Plays Golf One Day have been presented publically by the LARK Theatre, NY NY. In September of 2018 MOSAIC produced Mr. Martin’s The Alchemist of Jerusalem at the Kennedy Center in Washington DC as part of the Center’s Page to Stage Festival.

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