Support research for climate change

from €25,000 (60%)

Worldwide people depend on water from the mountains, which is why it is so important to understand how climate high up in the mountains is changing. Since glaciers are melting and we face more frequent floods and landslides. UU is conducting research in the Himalayas on climate change. It is not easy to take measurements at high altitude. But with the help of small weather stations, we still manage to collect the data. Help us and donate a weather station.

 

Every year, the Utrecht University Fund selects 4 projects for the Doorgeven campaign. This year, research on climate change in the Himalayas is one of the selected projects.
The other 3 projects are:
Research on chronic pain
Give to education on biodiversity
Research on chronic pain.

For more information, please visit www.uu.nl/doorgeven

Professor W.W. (Walter) Immerzeel has twenty years’ experience in geo-informatics, water resource management and climate change and is skilled in hydro-meteorological monitoring, the use of remote sensing, simulation models and spatial analysis and he has been doing research on Himalayan hydrology since 2002. He holds a PhD degree in physical geography from Utrecht University and he is a leading scientist on the interface of mountain hydrology, climate change and agriculture, with a particular focus on the Himalaya. He has worked in the Netherlands as well as in numerous developing countries and he has a large international network. He worked at International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) in Nepal for two years, was postdoc at ETH Zurich and was associated to the research and consulting firm FutureWater from 2005 to 2015. He has been awarded several prestigious personal grants: NWO-VENI (2011), ERC Starting Grant (2015) and NWO-VIDI (2016) for his pioneering Himalayan research. In 2017 he was awarded the Boussinesque Prize for Hydrology and in 2018 he received the prestigious James B. Macelwane medal and became a fellow of the American Geophysical Union. He currently works as Professor Mountain Hydrology at Utrecht University where he is leading a number of projects on the cutting edge of climate change, glaciology and hydrology, is organizing research expeditions to the Himalayas and is responsible for teaching several courses in the curriculum of the Geosciences faculty.

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