Celestina Dominelli
Financial reporter in Rome. I have been working for Il Sole 24 Ore since 2006. My focus is energy with particular attention to government strategies and state-owned companies.
Introductory remarks by Gilberto Pichetto Fratin, Minister of the Environment and Energy Security, in conversation with Celestina Dominelli of Il Sole 24 Ore.
This is followed by a roundtable discussion with Francesca Gostinelli, Head of Italy at Enel; Agostino Scornajenchi, CEO of Snam; Emanuela Trentin, CEO of Veolia Italia; and Giuseppe Tripoli, Secretary General of Unioncamere
Financial reporter in Rome. I have been working for Il Sole 24 Ore since 2006. My focus is energy with particular attention to government strategies and state-owned companies.
Agostino Scornajenchi, born in Rome in 1972, has been Chief Executive Officer of Snam since May 2025. Since 2021 he has been the President of ANDAF - National Association of Administrative and Financial Directors, the primary organization of Italian CFOs.
CEO of Veolia Italy since 2019 and Member of the Group Board of Directors since 2016. In May 2023, she was appointed Vice President of Assistal, the National Association of Plant Builders, Energy Efficiency Services – ESCo and Facility Management, a member of Confindustria. Graduated in Management Engineering from the Politecnico di Milano, she has over twenty years of experience in cross-cutting sectors. From 2015 to 2019 she was HR & Communication Director at Siram Veolia.
With a thirty-year career in public institutions, Dr. Tripoli has held top-level positions at MISE, Simest, and SACE, standing out for his commitment to the internationalization of SMEs and the implementation of the Small Business Act. Graduated with honors in Law and awarded the title of Knight of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic, he has extensive experience in chairing national and international scientific and strategic committees.

Via Belenzani, once called Contrada Larga, is the main street leading to Piazza Duomo and one of the city's most atmospheric streets, surrounded on both sides by Renaissance palaces decorated with beautiful frescoes. Palazzo Geremia, today the seat of the Trento City Council, is one of these: inside there are several rooms - beautifully frescoed and often still with their original wooden ceilings.