Joel Marciano Jr.
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Bongbong Marcos
Rodrigo Duterte
Joel Marciano Jr. | |
|---|---|
| 1st Director General[1] of the Philippine Space Agency | |
| In office January 7, 2020 – September 16, 2025 [2] | |
| President | Rodrigo Duterte Bongbong Marcos |
| Preceded by | Office established |
| Succeeded by | Gay Jane Perez (OIC) |
| Director of the Advanced Science and Technology Institute of the Department of Science and Technology | |
| In office March 29, 2016 – January 7, 2020 | |
| President | Benigno Aquino III Rodrigo Duterte |
| Preceded by | Denis F. Villorente |
| Succeeded by | Joanna G. Syjuco |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Joel Joseph Sacro Marciano Jr. 1972 or 1973 (age 53–54) Manila, Philippines |
| Education | University of the Philippines Diliman (BSc) University of New South Wales (PhD) |
| Occupation | Government official |
| Profession | Engineer and academic |
Joel Joseph Sacro Marciano Jr. is a Filipino engineer, academic and the first Director General of the Philippine Space Agency, a government agency under the Office of the President in charge of the Philippines' national space program.[3]
Prior to his appointment as PhilSA administrator, Marciano served as acting Director of the Advanced Science and Technology Institute of the Philippine Department of Science and Technology.[4] He is also a university professor at the University of the Philippines College of Engineering since 1994.[5] Marciano has also served as the program head of the Philippine Scientific Earth Observation Microsatellite program (PHL-Microsat) that launched the first Philippine-made satellite, the Diwata-1, into space in April 2016.[6]
Marciano is the second of four siblings born to Joel Jacob Marciano and Elizabeth Sacro.[5] His father was an electronics engineer (Mapua University EE Batch 1968) and entrepreneur from Pinamalayan, Oriental Mindoro who was a former National President of the Institute of Electronics and Communications Engineers of the Philippines and who founded the telecommunications company Telecommunications & Computer Technologies Inc. (TCTI)[7][8][9]
He attended Benedictine Abbey School (now San Beda College Alabang) in Muntinlupa, Metro Manila.[5] While there, he developed an interest in public speaking and joined several math competitions. After graduating from high school in 1989, he enrolled in a five-year engineering course at the University of the Philippines Diliman in Quezon City.[10] He considered taking up the study of law, but eventually decided to follow in his father's footsteps with the goal of working for his father's company. He earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering in 1994.[5]
Immediately following his graduation, Marciano pursued his Master of Science degree in the same university where he was also on the faculty of the UP Diliman Department of Electrical and Electronics Engineering. Two years into his postgraduate studies at UP, he won a government scholarship to the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia where he received his Doctor of Philosophy in Electrical Engineering and Telecommunications in 2000.[5]