BCBusiness

October 2018 - The Wheel Deal

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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bCbusinEss.Ca OCtObER 2018 BCBusiness 39 e n T r e P r e n e u r o F T H e Y e A r 2 0 1 8 / C L E A N T E C H When Zak El-Ramly was passed over for promotion, he started his own company. In 1995, he was executive vice-president of Powerex Corp., the BC Hydro and Power Authority subsidiary that markets the utility's surplus electricity. Someone else was appointed president of Powerex, and "I realized that my market value is higher than my corporate value, so I decided to leave," El-Ramly explains. He founded ZE PowerGroup to advise utilities on how to operate in a com- petitive environment follow- ing the deregulation of U.S. enerˆy markets. El-Ramly came to Canada on a student visa in 1969. Born in Port Said in northeastern Eˆypt and raised in Cairo, he was teaching engineering at Cairo's Ain Shams University when the Six-Day War broke out in 1967. Following a year in Kuwait working as an instrumentation engineer at an oil re'nery, he moved to Ottawa, where he completed a master's degree in combus- tion engineering and a PhD in aeronautical engineering at Carleton University. He stayed on as a "ight safety researcher until 1977, when he landed an engineering job with BC Hydro's enerˆy conservation division in Vancouver. Several years later, by then manager of the utility's enerˆy conservation group, El-Ramly attended a NATO conference on enerˆy management in Portugal. "I realized how much we knew compared to the rest of the world," he says, "and eureka, I came up with the idea of having a massive pro- gram that covers the various aspects of conservation in one program," now called Power Smart. In 1990 he moved to Powerex. In 2001, El-Ramly created ZE Market Analyzer (ZEMA), which develops software that helps clients like Chev- ron Corp., Gazprom and Royal Dutch Shell use their resources more eŸciently. ZE Power Engineering, launched in 2005, designs electrical sub- stations, mainly in B.C. The Richmond-based, family-owned ZE group of com- panies has about 250 employ- ees in Canada, including El-Ramly's 've children, plus another 20 in the U.S., the U.K. and Singapore. "We actually graduate a lot of people from our operation, because we are willing to train and take new- comers and new graduates," El-Ramly says. "Of course when you do that, you don't have fences, and the wild horses roam around. As a result, we feed the whole neighbourhood with horses." —F.S. W I N N E R Zak El-Ramly p R E S I D E N T a N D C E O , Z E p O W E R - G R O u p + Z E p O W E R E N G I N E E R I N G What did your summer jobs teach you about business? Thinking you are great or know it all is one's own major shortcoming and impediment to success

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