Faiz Chowdhury Calls for an Impact-Driven Technology Economy
California, USA, 2nd April 2026, ZEX PR WIRE, Technology has reshaped nearly every part of modern life. Yet global challenges remain urgent. More than 700 million people still live in extreme poverty. Roughly 675 million lack access to electricity. Over 2 billion people do not have safely managed drinking water. Climate-related disasters continue to increase in frequency and cost.
Faiz Chowdhury, Founder and Vision Leader of Graphene Valley Corporation, believes the problem is not a lack of innovation. It is how innovation is measured.
“Success is using our abilities and talents to have a positive impact on people and our world,” Chowdhury says. “Reducing suffering and optimizing the ability of people to succeed and thrive.”
Chowdhury is advocating for a shift in how businesses, investors, engineers, and entrepreneurs define success. Instead of focusing only on traditional profit and loss metrics, he calls for a broader standard: PL&I — Profit, Loss, and Impact.
“In my business, we do not judge from a P&L,” he explains. “We use PL&I. Profit allows us to continue. But Impact is the measure.”
Why Impact Matters Now
Global energy demand is expected to rise nearly 50 percent by 2050. The International Energy Agency reports that clean energy investment surpassed $1.7 trillion in recent years, yet fossil fuels still account for the majority of global energy use. At the same time, water scarcity affects over 40 percent of the world’s population.
Chowdhury believes advanced materials such as graphene can help address these systemic problems. Graphene is known for being stronger than steel by weight, highly conductive, and flexible. It has applications in batteries, water filtration, electronics, mobility, and renewable energy systems.
“Without impact to improve the world — making products better, safer, faster, more efficient, cleaner — then my goals are not being achieved,” he says.
He argues that technology leaders have a responsibility to think beyond quarterly results.
“I realize that I am merely a nano-person in all of humanity. One among 8 billion,” Chowdhury says. “But I am obligated to use the talents I was given to make the world a better place.”
A Broader View of Success
Chowdhury’s perspective is shaped by his early life. Born in a poor village in Bangladesh, he later came to the United States alone as a teenager to pursue advanced education. He earned dual degrees in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from UC Berkeley and later completed a leadership certificate at MIT Sloan.
“My entire life has been overcoming challenges and difficulties,” he says. “Perseverance and strength of character have been key.”
That experience informs his belief that technology must serve humanity at scale. According to the World Bank, small increases in access to reliable energy and clean water can significantly raise educational outcomes and lifetime earnings in developing regions.
Chowdhury believes innovators should ask a simple question before launching any new product or company: What real human problem does this solve?
“Success is measured by results and the impact those results have,” he says.
What Individuals Can Do
Chowdhury’s call to action is not limited to CEOs or policymakers. He believes individuals can shape the future through daily choices.
He encourages people to:
- Support companies that prioritize sustainability and long-term impact.
- Learn about emerging technologies like graphene and clean energy systems.
- Invest time in education, mentorship, and community problem-solving.
- Evaluate personal and professional goals based on their broader impact.
“Personal and professional success are intertwined,” he says. “If we compromise ourselves to gain financially, we are hurting our family by not being the people we are supposed to be.”
He also emphasizes the importance of surrounding oneself with strong teams and diverse thinkers.
“A good heart and good motivation,” he says, “and the ability to work with a team that fills in your weaknesses.”
A Long-Term Vision
As global industries adapt to climate pressures, digital transformation, and resource constraints, Chowdhury believes the next era of innovation must focus on security in energy, water, food, and economic systems.
“A larger vision keeps us from getting upset by bumps in the road,” he says. “Impact is the measure.”
He hopes more leaders adopt a similar framework. Not as a slogan, but as a discipline.
“We are obligated to use our talents and opportunities,” he says. “That is where true success lies.”
To read the full interview, visit the website here.
About Faiz Chowdhury
Faiz Chowdhury is the Founder and Vision Leader of Graphene Valley Corporation. A graduate of UC Berkeley in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, with a Certificate in Management and Leadership from MIT Sloan, he is a serial entrepreneur focused on advancing graphene and other breakthrough technologies to address global challenges in energy, mobility, health, and sustainability. His guiding philosophy centers on PL&I — Profit, Loss, and Impact — with Impact as the ultimate measure of success.
Contact:
Info@faiz-m-chowdhury.jimdosite.com
Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Funds Pulse journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.
