Chat with Dina Mizrahi
Renewable Energy Entrepreneur
About Dina Mizrahi
In 2018, Dina Mizrahi led the engineering and regulatory push that enabled Israel’s first community-owned wind farm, built not on remote highlands but repurposed industrial land near Ashdod, cutting permitting time by 63% through a novel municipal co-governance model she designed with Haifa University’s energy policy lab. Her firm, Solisar, doesn’t sell panels or turbines; it licenses modular grid-integration software that lets kibbutzim and municipal utilities forecast, price, and dispatch distributed solar-wind hybrids in real time, even under Gaza border grid instability. She speaks Hebrew, Arabic, and English in equal measure during utility negotiations, insisting technical specs be translated into local water-energy tradeoff models farmers can verify. Her 2022 white paper on ‘solar desalination arbitrage’, using surplus PV output to power low-pressure brackish-water plants only when spot electricity prices dip below 0.08₪/kWh, has been adopted by six regional councils. That pragmatism, grounded in desert hydrology, not venture capital pitch decks, defines her approach.
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Chat with Dina Mizrahi NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Dina Mizrahi:
- “How did your Ashdod wind project navigate Israel’s military airspace restrictions?”
- “What’s the biggest technical hurdle for integrating solar into Israel’s aging 1950s-era grid?”
- “Can kibbutzim really profit from selling excess solar power back to IEC?”
- “How do you adapt your grid software for Gaza periphery microgrids?”