Karl Falkenberg, currently President of the Club of Rome EU-Chapter and senior advisor at the consultancy Shearwater, had a long and illustrious career at the European Commission, including top positions as Director-General for Environment and Deputy Director-General for Trade. Upon retiring from the European Commission in 2017 he became an independent policy adviser and university lecturer. He is a trained economist and journalist.
Widely recognised as one the best trade negotiators Europe has ever had, Karl began his career in the Commission in 1977 as a textiles negotiator. He moved to the broader multilateral trade negotiations area, and represented the EU in the Uruguay Round negotiations that established the WTO. He negotiated the major multilateral services sector liberalisation in Telecommunications, Financial Services, Audiovisual Services and Maritime Transport.
After the fall of the Berlin Wall he served as an adviser on international relations and German reunification to then Commission President Jacques Delors, before being appointed in 2004 as Deputy Director-General for Trade, covering all EU bilateral trade relations.

Together with CoR-EU Board member Louis Meuleman, Karl initiated in Brussels the Beau Lieu Café, a series of lively talk shows on sustainability that are supported by a live band. “-> quote?
From 2009 to 2015 he was Director-General for Environment, dealing with Climate Change negotiations and all domestic and international environmental policies. He was the EU lead negotiator for Climate, Biodiversity and a range of other international agreements. He launched the EU’s circular economy policies and negotiated the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN. In 2016 he wrote a report on the EU’s implementation of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, called Sustainability Now, addressed to the previous European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker.
On the Club of Rome EU-Chapter: (quote)

Karl has lectured at Oxford University as a Senior Fellow, and at the London School of Economics, Aberdeen, Parma, the College of Europe and the Colegio de México.
