Jennifer Willenbrock

Director | Transaction Advisory | London

About Jennifer

​As a director at 1898 & Co., Jennifer specializes in due diligence and merger and acquisition (M&A) transaction advisory for critical energy and infrastructure industries. With decades of experience conducting environmental and technical due diligence, she has worked with lenders and financiers to advise on large M&A and investments around the world.

A graduate of King’s College London, where she studied applied environmental science, Jennifer has spent her career as an environmental consultant providing technical and environmental guidance. As well as helping financiers oversee their investments, she works with some of the world’s largest companies to support decarbonization and environmental, social and governance (ESG) strategies, environmental compliance, permitting, environmental policies and procedure development, and health and safety management.

How Jennifer helps her clients
Jennifer has over 20 years of experience helping clients with technical and environmental advisory services. With global experience in environmental, social, health and safety advisory roles for M&A and project financing, she provides technical, environmental, social, health and safety adviser roles to lenders and equity investors.

What motivates Jennifer
Jennifer is motivated by delivering quality solutions and being diligent in everything she does. Seeing a project gain investment and knowing that a thorough due diligence was completed and the client has been set up to be successful provides a sense of pride and satisfaction of a job well done.

A little bit about Jennifer
A beach lover, certified scuba diver and marine life enthusiast, Jennifer prefers to spend her time away from work somewhere near, or in, the ocean.



Specialties

Business Case Assessment

Transaction Advisory

Energy Policy Advisory


Published Work

Examine Track Record Before Committing to a Lenders Environmental and Social Consultant - Blog

Investing for a Better World: Making the Case for Standardised ESG Data Reporting - Blog