Peter C. Schultz, Ph.D., is co-inventor of the fiber optics used worldwide for telecommunications. He is an internationally-recognized scientist and has received numerous awards for his technical achievements. In 1993 he was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame and in 2000 received the National Medal of Technology from President Clinton for his accomplishments (the highest technology award of the US government). In 1991, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Engineering. He is an expert in fiber optic technology (including telecommunication fibers and both terrestrial and undersea deployment, as well as specialty fibers for sensors) and general materials technology.
He was President and Chief Technology Officer of Heraeus Inc. (1988-2001), the 900-employee US subsidiary of a multi-billion dollar private German company serving the fiber telecom, semiconductor and optics markets. He was also VP Technology (1984-1988) for SpecTran Corp (a large Massachusetts-based fiber optics manufacturer) and Senior Scientist for Corning, Inc. (1967-1984).
Since 2001 he has provided technical and business consulting services through Peter Schultz Consulting, LLC to numerous international companies, including Intel Corp, Spread Networks, Seagate Technology and Yazaki, as well as an expert witness representing five companies in various patent infringement and litigation cases. He served (2001 thru 2019) as senior advisor and sole outside Board member of OFS Fitel (the $800M+ AT&T fiber optics business unit acquired by Furukawa in 2001) and as Director, Secretary and advisor (2010 through 2019) and Interim CEO (March through September 2016) of viNGN (the Virgin Islands Next Generation Network), a government-owned (semi-autonomous) company building and operating an open-access all-fiber optic telecom system in the US Virgin Islands. He is also President of a research company (BioSensor Inc., founded in 1997) developing several novel medical sensors based on Russian technology. One of these devices shows very promising results in medical trials for the treatment of autism in children.
He is a popular invited speaker at numerous conferences and meetings covering the history, deployment and future trends of fiber optic communications. He has taught courses at Cornell University (Visiting Professor Materials Science), George Washington University (Continuing Engineering Program Professor) and University of Virginia (Visiting Professor of Darden School).
He is a graduate of Rutgers University (B.S.1964, Ph.D.1967) and the MIT Sloan School Senior Executive Program (1984). Peter Schultz holds 26 patents, has written over 22 research papers and is the recipient of numerous other awards recognizing his achievements, including the American Innovator Award (first recipient-US Dept. of Commerce 1995) presented by Ron Brown (Secretary of Commerce), and the Czech Gold Medal for Achievement presented by President Havel in 2002.