Sara May serves as Chief Executive Officer of GenPro Energy Solutions, where she leads the company’s strategy and growth across North America. Since joining GenPro in 2018, she has played a central role in shaping the company’s development and finance strategy, building bridges between policy insight, project execution, and sustainable innovation.
Sara began her tenure at GenPro in Government Affairs, establishing the company’s first formal presence in energy policy and market development. Her ability to connect emerging trends with business strategy soon expanded her role to include corporate development and financial modeling, supporting GenPro’s Sales and Development teams as the company scaled into new markets and technologies.
Before joining GenPro, Sara spent more than a decade working internationally in renewable energy and rural development. As India Head for Bloomberg New Energy Finance from 2008 to 2010, she launched their India office and a new line of research focused on clean energy investment and policy. She also worked with biofuels and solar developers in India and later with an MIT research lab in India, Tanzania, and Myanmar, evaluating clean technologies such as solar pumps and lanterns for rural applications.
Sara brings a global perspective to GenPro’s mission of making clean energy easy, combining data-driven insight with a passion for meaningful, sustainable growth.
Sara Lynn May joined GenPro in March 2018 with deep experience in renewable energy in both project deployment as well as market trends and research. Her interest in energy policy brought her to GenPro in the company’s first Government Affairs position, and that role has grown to encompass corporate development and finance more broadly. Today she supports both the Sales and Development teams with project finance modeling and business development strategy, as well as providing business analytics for the company as a whole.
Sara spent much of her earlier career in India, working at the intersection of rural development, clean technology, and social enterprise. As India head for Bloomberg New Energy Finance between 2008-2010, she opened their India office and started a new stream of research focused on emerging market and policy trends in the region. Also in India, she worked for a biofuels company and a solar developer, and most recently worked in India, Tanzania, and Myanmar for a research lab at MIT, focused on comparative evaluations of clean tech products used in rural development settings, such as water quality test kits, solar lanterns, and solar pumps.

