Manish Bapna

Manish Bapna
Acting President (Executive Vice President & Managing Director)

Manish Bapna joined WRI as its executive vice president and managing director in June 2007. His interests and expertise are in international development with a particular focus on rural poverty and natural resources.

Bapna oversees institutional and program strategies, approves new lines of work, and is responsible for WRI’s day-to-day management. Under his leadership, the institute has developed a five-year strategic plan and is in the process of deepening its engagement in both China and India.

Previously, he was the executive director of the nonprofit Bank Information Center (BIC), whose mission is to protect rights and promote sustainability in the projects and policies of international financial institutions. Bapna presided over considerable growth at BIC, including sizable increases in staff, funding and influence, especially in developing countries.

Bapna has also served as a senior economist and task team leader at the World Bank, where he led multidisciplinary teams in designing and implementing community-driven water, watershed, and rural development projects in Asia and Latin America. Several of the projects he helped develop received “excellence awards” by the Bank and were recognized as highly successful by independent observers.

His experience in international development also includes advisory roles at Seva Mandir (a leading grassroots nonprofit in India) and Women’s World Banking (a microfinance support organization). Earlier, he worked as a strategy consultant for McKinsey & Company in the financial services and technology industries.

Bapna has been cited in front-page articles in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and International Herald Tribune and is regularly quoted in leading papers. He has testified before U.S. Congressional Committees on the role and effectiveness of development aid and is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations.

Bapna received graduate degrees in business and international development from Harvard University and an undergraduate degree in engineering from MIT. He is married to Geeta and they have two children, Laila and Arav, and a dog named Maggie.

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Latest Post

Submitted on May 2, 2012
This piece originally appeared in the Guardian Sustainable Business. In 1992, heads of state converged on Rio for the Earth Summit, a bright moment that seemed to herald a new era for sustainable development. Bold speeches were given, important treaties signed. Saving the planet was cast as a moral imperative. Multilateral institutions would lead the way. Twenty years later, the world looks...

More Blog Posts

Submitted on April 24, 2012
This piece was co-authored with Vinod Thomas, Director General of independent evaluation at the Asian Development Bank. It originally appeared in the South China Morning Post. China, South Korea,...
Submitted on April 17, 2012
This piece originally appeared on Forbes. NOAA called it Meteorological March Madness. Other commentators likened it to science fiction. More than 15,000 daily heat records were broken around the U...
In Aqueduct | Submitted on March 22, 2012
It’s rare for water to make waves at the World Economic Forum’s annual gathering of business leaders and finance ministers. But the most recent Davos summit was an exception. A new eye-opening...
Submitted on March 12, 2012
This piece was written with Richard Lavin, President, Caterpillar Group. It originally appeared in China Daily. China’s recent history has been marked by tremendous economic growth and...
Submitted on February 29, 2012
This piece originally appeared on Forbes. What do Apple, HP and Dell have in common – apart from making computers? They all source electronics from Foxconn, the beleaguered Chinese company under...
Submitted on February 15, 2012
This piece originally appeared on Forbes. Between meetings with President Obama this week, China’s vice president and leader-in-waiting Xi Jinping will make time to visit Iowa farm country. Back at...
Submitted on February 9, 2012
This piece originally appeared on The Huffington Post. In his annual State of the Union address, President Obama declared: “I will not walk away from clean energy.” His words were a sharp rebuttal...
Submitted on January 10, 2012
What are the top environmental and development issues that will shape 2012? This morning, I presented the World Resources Institute’s 9th annual “Stories to Watch” at the National Press Club. While...
Submitted on January 6, 2012
This piece was written with Vinod Thomas, Director General, Independent Evaluation, Asian Development Bank. It originally appeared in The Guardian. As we enter a new year, the world continues to be...
Submitted on November 22, 2011
This post was written with Vinod Thomas, director general of the Asian Development Bank and former senior vice president, Independent Evaluation Group, World Bank. It was originally posted by the...
Submitted on November 2, 2011
This piece originally appeared on the Bangkok Post website. A third of Thailand is under water. Epic floods have taken people’s lives, destroyed businesses and crops, and are now sweeping into...
Submitted on October 28, 2011
On October 20, I spoke at an Interactive Dialogue of the UN General Assembly about the imminent report of the High Level Panel for Global Sustainability. The Panel, convened by Secretary-General Ban...
Submitted on October 26, 2011
If you believe the doomsday merchants, the scariest thing about this Halloween is the fact that the world’s population will pass seven billion on or near October 31. Population growth, however...
Submitted on October 18, 2011
This post is based on the foreword to World Resources: Decision Making in a Changing Climate, co-signed by Helen Clark (UNDP), Achim Steiner (UNEP), Robert B. Zoellick (World Bank Group), and...
Submitted on September 6, 2011
Vice President Joe Biden had it right in his recent visit to China. Global stability, he declared in an August 18 speech in Beijing “rests in no small part on the cooperation between the United...
Submitted on July 22, 2011
This story originally appeared in the Washington Post. It’s too darn hot. From Maine to Hawaii, the mercury has been rising relentlessly. The oven-like conditions in the United States are just...
Submitted on June 15, 2011
When it comes to changing the way we use energy, cities are at the center of the action. On June 2nd, I had the pleasure of speaking at the C40 Summit in São Paulo, Brazil. The C40 Cities Climate...
Submitted on April 5, 2011
The global recession has brought new attention to chronic structural flaws in current economic models and assumptions. As economies struggle to recover, many are taking a closer look at the broad...