Ediger (born 1953, Eregli-Konya, Turkey) is a scientist, writer and bureaucrat.
After graduating from the Middle East Technical University, he received his PhD from the Pennsylvania State University in 1986.
His training is in geology, geochemistry, and palynology and after working as an oil and coal geologist in industry for some years his interest was switched into several energy issues, including energy resources, economics, policy, security and geopolitics.
He is married to Elçin Öztürk and has one daughter (Sirin Ediger Bayülgen) and one granddaughter (Istanbul Bayülgen).
Ediger’s professional career has been shaped by research, teaching and consultancy simultaneously carried out at industry, university and government.
Assigned as the first Energy Adviser to the President of Turkish Republic in 1998 and has worked for a total of twelve years with three presidents, namely H.E.
Süleyman Demirel, H.E.
Ahmet Necdet Sezer and H.E.
Abdullah Gül.
Awarded with Sedat Simavi Social Sciences Award in 2006 for his book Neft and Petroleum in the Ottoman Empire and became one of the few authors specialized on science and engineering awarded on social sciences field.
He is the first recipient of the Turkish Association of Petroleum Geologists’ Cevat Eyüp Tasman Award in 2007.
He has also been listed in Top 10 Most Influential Voices in the Power Generation Today by POWER-GEN Europe in 2013.
He is very active in founding NGOs and also in organizing conferences.
He is the founder and president of the Energy and Climate Change Foundation (ENIVA) and founding executive committee of the Sustainable Production and Consumption Association (SUT-D), the first NGOs to be working in energy sustainability and climate change in Turkey.
He recently served as the General Chair of ICE 2014, which was held by the American Association of Petroleum Geologists (AAPG) in 2014 in Istanbul and 5th Multinational Energy and Value Conference, which was held in Istanbul in 2015.
He has been the moderator of the forum for “The Big Energy Question: Powering Our Urban Future” as part of “The Great Energy Challenge”, a National Geographic Society Initiative organized in partnership with Shell in 2014 in Istanbul after Washington D.C.