Colloquium: Prof. Denise Mauzerall

Tuesday, 12th March 2019, at 17.15 - 18.30
ETH Zurich, UNO B 11, Universitätstrasse 41

Potential Air Pollution, Health and Climate Implications of China’s Energy Future

Enlarged view: Colloquium flyer for the Prof. Denise Mauzerall talk

To be updated

About Prof. Denise Mauzerall

Denise Mauzerall is Professor of Environmental Engineering and International Affairs at the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The objective of her research group is to utilize science to inform the development of far-sighted air quality policy that considers impacts of air pollution on human health, agriculture and climate change. Their approach is to use rigorous scientific tools to address technical questions of direct policy relevance. Research in her group analyzes the impacts of air pollution globally as well as in both the largest rapidly industrializing country (China) and in the largest developed country (US). Recent work has examined the effect of present and potential future concentrations of air pollutants, particularly black carbon and ozone, on public health, global agriculture and climate change and the potential benefits of various mitigation strategies. They have also investigated inter-state and inter-continental transport of air pollutants with an emphasis on transport from rapidly industrializing Asia to the rest of the world. These issues are interlinked, globally pervasive and addressing one provides opportunities for leveraging solutions to others. Her goal is to use global change science to facilitate the formation of sound environmental policy.

You can read a Summary of the talk on ISTP News (to be updated).

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