MIT Tech Review Names Tesla CTO Innovator of the Year

JB Straubel, chief technology officer for electric-car startup Tesla Motors, gets the top award in the Tech Review's annual TR35 list, which also recognizes five other greentech innovators under 35 years of age.

The MIT Technology Review said Tuesday it has selected JB Straubel, chief technology officer for Tesla Motors, as its Innovator of the Year.

The publication chose Straubel for his engineering work on the company's all-electric Roadster, citing his leadership of the development of the "groundbreaking car's" battery, motor and digital-control systems.

"People have looked at electric cars for a long time as a way to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and other toxic emissions from cars, and generally speaking, they just haven't sold well and they have been viewed as underpowered, short-range vehicles," Erika Jonietz, senior editor for the MIT Technology Review, said Monday. "With the engineering JB has led at Tesla, the company has really changed the way people view electric cars."

The company has pioneered systems that use commonly available lithium-ion batteries and found a way to make them safe in a high-risk environment where cars crash and batteries explode, all while delivering higher torque, she said.

"The popularity in the press and initial sales of this incredibly expensive car has pushed a lot of people to reexamine the viability of electric cars, including major automakers," Jonietz said. "We think it has the potential to have a really big impact on transportation and on the environment."

The award is part of the Technology Review's annual TR35 list of 35 "outstanding" innovators under the age of 35, who were picked from a field of more than 300 submissions, according to the announcement.

It's the second year in a row that the publication has picked its top winner from the greentech arena.

Last year's top innovator was David Berry, a principal at venture-capital firm Flagship Ventures, who won for his work developing microbes that make renewable petroleum. His work was the basis for the microbes LS9 is developing (see his TR35 profile here).

Straubel is one of six greentech-related innovators included on the TR35 list this year. The publication also picked six clean-technology innovators last year.

Jonietz said the Technology Review didn't make a particular effort to pick clean-energy winners.

"We set out to pick the young innovators who we think are going to have the greatest impact on the way we live and work in the future," she said. "Increasingly, people who work on these problems are having that sort of impact. It's really just a reflection of our goal with the package."

Aside from Straubel, this year's greentech winners include: