| James J. Graham Jim Graham, a resident of Centennial, Colorado, is a 1970  graduate of Michigan Tech’s Department of Metallurgy and Materials  Engineering.  Jim began his career as  process engineer for Texas Gulf in Moab, Utah. In 1973, he moved to the coal  fields of West Virginia for Zapata Corporation and through a series of promotions  moved to Lexington, Kentucky as Vice President Engineering. His next move in  1992 was to General Exploration Company, a diversified energy company in  Dallas, Texas, as  President.  In 1984 Jim joined the French  oil, gas and mining company, TOTAL, as President of their US operations.  After almost ten years with TOTAL, he moved  to ConverDyn as the President and CEO.  ConverDyn is the partnership between  affiliates of Honeywell International and General Atomics, and managed the  conversion services business from Honeywell’s Metropolis, Illinois facility.  In addition to his position at ConverDyn, he  was a Senior Vice President of General Atomics and responsible for the  company’s nuclear fuel cycle activities from 1992 until 2004.  After leading ConverDyn for over 16 years,  Jim retired in June 2009 and established his own company, Nuclear Fuel Cycle  Consulting LLC, to provide services to the nuclear industry.  Over all, Jim retired with 40 years  experience in the mining and energy industries with the last 26 in the nuclear  industry. Jim has been the author of numerous  papers and presentations for the nuclear industry and was a member of the  Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) Board of Directors.  He has served as Chairman of the Board of  Governors for the World Nuclear Fuel Market (WNFM) and of the NEI’s Nuclear  Fuel Supply Forum.  He Co-Chaired the  World Nuclear Association’s 2007 Global Nuclear Fuel Market study.
 His  activities outside the energy industry include serving as the Chairman of the  Board of Trustees for nine years of St. Mary’s Academy, a private school in the  Denver area.  Jim also spent several  years as a Trustee of the Michigan Tech Fund, in 1977 was selected the school’s  outstanding young alumni in 1977 and in 2000 was inducted into the Academy  of Materials Science and Engineering.
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