A global enterprise to develop sustainable
energy and security infrastructure.
Fortifying relationships and protecting
critical infrastructure for
lasting stability.
Providing large-scale, secure, zero-
carbon energy to meet the world's
growing demands.
Weaving rewarding and enduring
opportunities into the future
for generations to come.
IP3 brings senior-level U.S. national security, foreign policy, and energy leaders along with best-in-class industry partners to reliably deliver the full spectrum of security and energy infrastructure to the highest safety standards.
our teamGeneral (Ret.) Keith Alexander, U.S. Army, Co-founder and Director at IP3, on creating a strategy for secure economic development of nuclear energy in the Middle East, and implications for the region. Live from Bloomberg’s Future of Energy Global Summit in New York City. READ MORE >
The United States has a unique opportunity to shape and engage with Saudi Arabia at the outset of its nuclear energy program.READ MORE >
Does nuclear power have a future in the United States? Perhaps the more important question should be: Does America have the vision and national resolve to develop comprehensive energy policies to maintain our leadership in nuclear energy? READ MORE >
In 1945, President Roosevelt and King Abdul Aziz of Saudi Arabia forged a partnership under which the United States provided security for the Kingdom to assure the flow of oil to global markets. READ MORE >
In 2015, John Kerry, then the Secretary of State, brought nuclear physicist and Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz with him to Iran,… READ MORE >
There are two current trends in the Middle East that threaten to enable a nuclear arms race. A third offers a way to prevent it. READ MORE >
“The Italian navigator has just landed in the new world.” This was the coded message received seventy-five years ago when Enrico Fermi, an Italian immigrant who’d come to America to escape fascism, created the first man-made nuclear reaction below the University of Chicago gymnasium in 1942. Shortly after this successful experiment, nuclear power was fueling Navy submarines.READ MORE >