Gerald Grandey

Gerald W. (Jerry) Grandey (born 1946, Long Beach, California) was previously the President and Chief Executive Officer of Cameco Corporation, one of the world's largest uranium producers. He joined Cameco in 1993 as Senior Vice President, and was appointed President in 2000 and CEO in 2003. In 2010, The Harvard Business Review recognized him as being one of the top 100 CEOs in the world because of the value created for shareholders during his tenure. Grandey retired from Cameco in 2011.

Inducted into the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame in 2013,[1] Grandey was awarded the Canadian Nuclear Association's Ian McRae Award in 2012[2] for his work in advancing nuclear energy in Canada. In 2011, he was nominated for the Oslo Business for Peace Award in recognition of his efforts to facilitate the dismantling of 20,000 Russian warheads (Megatons to Megawatts[3]), with the resulting uranium used in nuclear energy plants for the generation of electricity. The US Nuclear Energy Institute awarded Grandey the William S. Lee Award for leadership in the nuclear industry, noting his work to implement the Megatons to Megawatts agreement between the US and Russia.

Currently, Grandey serves on the boards of Nutrien Ltd, the world's largest provider of crop nutrients, inputs and services, and is Chair of Rare Elements Resources, a mineral resource company focused on rare earth deposits. Formerly, he was a member of the boards of Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan, Canadian Oil Sands, Inmet Mining Corporation, Centerra Gold Inc., Sandspring Resources and Bruce Power. He is on the Colorado School of Mines Foundation Board of Governors, the Dean's Advisory Council, and Edwards School of Business. He is Chairman Emeritus of the London-based World Nuclear Association.

Grandey was a 1964 graduate of Downey Senior High School in California. He was a National Merit Scholar and a multi-year letterman in both swimming and water polo. He has a degree in geophysical engineering from the Colorado School of Mines and a juris doctor degree from Northwestern University. In the late 1960s, Grandey spent two years in the United States military.

He is married with two grown children and three grandchildren.

References

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