Casten was the founding president and CEO of Trigen Energy Corporation (a New York Stock Exchange corporation) and its predecessors from 1977 through 2000. He served until 2006 as founding chair and CEO of Primary Energy and its subsidiary Primary Energy Recycling Corp. In 2006 he founded and was chairman of Recycled Energy Development (RED), based in Westmont, Illinois. In 2016 RED was sold to Ironclad Energy Partners.[4][5] These companies focused on energy recycling, a process that turns waste energy (usually heat) into clean power and steam.[6] Casten has said his goal is to combat global warming in a profitable way, reducing greenhouse gas emissions and energy costs at the same time.[7]
Casten has served as president of the International District Energy Association and co-founder and chairman of the World Alliance for Decentralized Energy, which are trade associations that promote combined heat and power, district heating, and other forms of distributed generation. Casten also serves on numerous boards for energy-related institutions, has testified before the energy committees of the U.S. Congress, and served on the informal policy advisory team of then-presidential candidate Barack Obama in 2008.[6]
Casten and his wife, Judy, celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary by running the Chicago Marathon in 2015.[20] Casten's son, Sean, was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 2018.[21] He has two other children: Damien and Gillian.
Tom is the lone funder of SunshinePAC which contributed to Sean Casten's 2018 election campaign. These contributions became a source of a complaint to the FEC in February 2022.[22][23]
References
^"CSI Fellows and Staff". Skeptical Inquirer. Committee for Skeptical Inquiry. Retrieved January 8, 2019.
^Casten, Thomas (1998). Turning Off the Heat: Why America Must Double Energy Efficiency to Save Money and Reduce Global Warming. Prometheus Books. ISBN1573922692.
^Casten, Thomas; Schewe, Phillip (January–February 2009). "Getting the Most from Energy"(PDF). American Scientist. Retrieved January 9, 2019.