Danielle Fong

Danielle Fong (born October 30, 1987) is a Canadian scientist and entrepreneur. She was the co-founder and chief scientist of LightSail Energy.

Education
Fong was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and was raised in Dartmouth. At age 12, she enrolled in Dalhousie University, where she got her Bachelor of Science in Physics and Computer Science in 2005 at age 17. She joined the plasma physics program at Princeton University as a Ph.D. candidate, but later dropped out at age 20.

LightSail Energy
In 2009 at Berkeley, California, Fong co-founded LightSail Energy with entrepreneur Stephen Crane and Edwin P. Berlin Jr. LightSail Energy developed a form of compressed air energy storage, which was termed regenerative air energy storage (RAES). The company was initially backed by Khosla Ventures.

In 2013, Fong stated she wanted to solve an energy problem and help democratize the storage of energy, in order to change how the average person lives in their home.

LightSail raised over $70 million, including $2 million from Nova Scotia's Innovacorp, a government owned enterprise. In 2016 it pivoted to producing transport modules for natural gas. It entered hibernation and shut down in 2018, with Khosla Ventures retaining the patents.

Recognition
In 2011, Fong was featured in Forbes' "30 Under 30" entrepreneurs under the Energy category and interviewed by Forbes. She was named by the MIT Technology Review in their 2012 "Innovators Under 35" list. In 2013, Fong was included in Time's "30 Under 30" list.

Fong was a speaker at the Women 2.0 PITCH Conference & Competition in 2012.