Dr. Obikwelu serves as Director of Grid Systems within the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Electricity, where he oversees a multi-year energy research and development portfolio focused on advancing grid reliability, resilience, security, and affordability. His work spans the intersections of technology, policy, and business, including advanced microgrid technologies, inverter-based-resources, hybrid energy systems (integrating small nuclear reactors, energy storage, etc.), advanced transmission and distribution (T&D) technologies, and emerging energy challenges associated with electrification, AI-driven load growth, and evolving power system demands.
Dr. Obikwelu brings a multidisciplinary background spanning the electric utility industry, engineering-procurement-construction consulting, academia, and federal energy leadership. Prior to joining DOE, he held engineering and leadership roles supporting transmission and distribution systems, protection and control engineering, utility operations, compliance, and large-scale energy infrastructure and capital projects across the power sector. His experience also includes teaching power systems engineering in academic and professional settings and supporting workforce and technical training initiatives.
He holds a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering (Energy Systems) from Georgia Institute of Technology, a Master of Science in Electrical Engineering (Power/Energy Systems) from Michigan Technological University, a Master of Education from Harvard University focused on higher education leadership and workforce development, and a Bachelor of Science in Electrical and Computer Engineering from Wayne State University. He is currently pursuing a Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Indiana University-Bloomington Kelley School of Business, majoring in Business Strategy and Leadership. His hobbies of interest include lawn tennis, chess, a good read, mixed martial arts, running, and long walks.