. . . . . . "Founder and creator of the Comision Federal de Electricidad"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "30545663"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa (November 6, 1903 \u2013 December 22, 1980) was a Mexican civil engineer. Ram\u00EDrez was born in Guadalajara, Jalisco. At the age of 21 he completed his degree as a civil engineer at the Universidad Nacional Aut\u00F3noma de M\u00E9xico. He became part of the team that initiated the Comisi\u00F3n Nacional de Irrigaci\u00F3n (1926\u20131928 and 1929\u20131934) and of the Direcci\u00F3n de Obras Hidraulicas de la Secretar\u00EDa de Comunicaciones y Obras P\u00FAblicas (1934\u20131936) which coordinated works for the protection of Mexico City against flooding. Two institutions bear his name in recognition to his life achievements:"@en . . "Carlos Ramirez in his Office"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "5048"^^ . . . "1903-11-06"^^ . . . . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa (Guadalajara, Jalisco; 16 de noviembre de 1903-Ciudad de M\u00E9xico, 22 de diciembre de 1980) fue un funcionario e ingeniero civil mexicano. Impuls\u00F3 de la construcci\u00F3n de obras p\u00FAblicas y de la infraestructura para el sector el\u00E9ctrico. Fue el promotor de la fundaci\u00F3n y el primer director general de la Comisi\u00F3n Federal de Electricidad de 1937 a 1946, as\u00ED como de 1952 a 1958."@es . "Comision Federal de Electricidad of Mexico"@en . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa"@en . . "1903-11-06"^^ . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez"@en . . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa"@es . . . . . . "1980-12-22"^^ . . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez"@en . . . . . . . "1106765175"^^ . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa (November 6, 1903 \u2013 December 22, 1980) was a Mexican civil engineer. Ram\u00EDrez was born in Guadalajara, Jalisco. At the age of 21 he completed his degree as a civil engineer at the Universidad Nacional Aut\u00F3noma de M\u00E9xico. He became part of the team that initiated the Comisi\u00F3n Nacional de Irrigaci\u00F3n (1926\u20131928 and 1929\u20131934) and of the Direcci\u00F3n de Obras Hidraulicas de la Secretar\u00EDa de Comunicaciones y Obras P\u00FAblicas (1934\u20131936) which coordinated works for the protection of Mexico City against flooding. On December 18, 1937, he married Esther Otero Gonzalez, and they had six sons together: Jorge, Carlos, Sergio, Javier, Mario, and Oscar Ramirez Otero. In 1937 the president Lazaro Cardenas asked him to create and organize the Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE); in 1952 to 1959 he became the first director of the Comisi\u00F3n Federal de Electricidad. In this 16 years of work he completed or started the construction of 37 hydroelectric dams, 13 thermoelectric plants and one geothermic power plant. These projects consolidated the provisioning of energy to power all of Mexico, allowing economic growth through improvement in irrigation, industrial and residential systems. He led the nationalization of the electrical companies of Chapala, Morelia, Uruapan, Tlaxcala, Moncolva, Occidental, and others, serving on their boards of directors. In 1946 he became founder member of the Colegio de Ingenieros Civiles de Mexico. Ram\u00EDrez was the first general manager of Industria Electrica de Mexico (IEM), manufacturing company of products for the power generation and electrical markets. From 1948 to 1952 he became the technical director of the Constructora el Aguila, S.A., participating in several important construction projects. These included the Miguel Alem\u00E1n Dam on the Tonto River, upstream from Temascal, Oaxaca. It has a capacity of 8 million cubic metres (10 million cubic yards), or 2,100 million US gallons (8 million kilolitres). From 1959 to 1980 he participated in several companies including Proyectos INTUAL, focusing on projects for drinking water, irrigation, hydrolectric power, geohydrology, pollution control, and economic planning. In 1965 Carlos became the president founder of the Asociaci\u00F3n Mexicana de Hidr\u00E1ulica. In 1977 he received the first Lazaro Cardenas Medal from the president Lopez Portillo, and in 1978 he received the Premio Nacional de Ingenier\u00EDa. After his death in December 1980, the Colegio de Ingenieros Civiles de Mexico, gave a tribute to their late member on February 11, 1981. During the tribute, a request was made to honour Ram\u00EDrez by having his remains reinterred at the Rotunda of Illustrious Persons (Spanish: Rotonda de las Personas Ilustres) within the Pante\u00F3n de Dolores cemetery. The president approved the arrangement on July 12, and the remains were moved there on August 14, 2011. Two institutions bear his name in recognition to his life achievements: \n* The dam known as El Caracol \"Ing. Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa\" \n* Escuela Secundaria Tecnica No. 39 \"Ing. Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa\" since 1983"@en . "1980-12-22"^^ . . . . . "Carlos Ram\u00EDrez Ulloa (Guadalajara, Jalisco; 16 de noviembre de 1903-Ciudad de M\u00E9xico, 22 de diciembre de 1980) fue un funcionario e ingeniero civil mexicano. Impuls\u00F3 de la construcci\u00F3n de obras p\u00FAblicas y de la infraestructura para el sector el\u00E9ctrico. Fue el promotor de la fundaci\u00F3n y el primer director general de la Comisi\u00F3n Federal de Electricidad de 1937 a 1946, as\u00ED como de 1952 a 1958."@es . "*\n* Lazaro Cardenas Medal ,\n* Premio Nacional de Ingenier\u00EDa ,\n* Academico de Honor of La Academia Mexicana de Ingenier\u00EDa \n* Homenaje Postumo Colegio de Ingenerios y Arquitectos de M\u00E9xico"@en .