Greg Johannes

Chair

Blue Economy CRC

Greg Johannes has more than 20 years of leadership experience in the Australian public, private, not-for-profit and research sectors. His roles have included Head of the State Service and Secretary of the Department of Premier and Cabinet in Tasmania. In 2015 he was made a National Fellow of the Institute of Public Administration Australia for his outstanding contribution to the public sector in Australia over many years.

Greg has a deep interest in the oceans and extensive governance experience in the marine science sector. He recently completed a four-year stint as Independent Chair of the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership, was a long-serving board member for both the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems CRC and the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, and is a former member (ex-officio) of the Australian Antarctic Science Council.

Greg also runs a boutique consulting company helping boards and CEOs address complex development and organisational issues. The son of a marine biologist, in his spare time Greg has been in or on the water since he was a young boy living in a remote village in Micronesia, and he snorkels and dives on the world’s coral reefs whenever he can.

Greg Johannes has more than 20 years of leadership experience in the Australian public, private, not-for-profit and research sectors. His roles have included Head of the State Service and Secretary of the Department of Premier and Cabinet in Tasmania. In 2015 he was made a National Fellow of the Institute of Public Administration Australia for his outstanding contribution to the public sector in Australia over many years.

Greg has a deep interest in the oceans and extensive governance experience in the marine science sector. He recently completed a four-year stint as Independent Chair of the Australian Antarctic Program Partnership, was a long-serving board member for both the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems CRC and the Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, and is a former member (ex-officio) of the Australian Antarctic Science Council.

Greg also runs a boutique consulting company helping boards and CEOs address complex development and organisational issues. The son of a marine biologist, in his spare time Greg has been in or on the water since he was a young boy living in a remote village in Micronesia, and he snorkels and dives on the world’s coral reefs whenever he can.