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Dutch professor and scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jan Rotmans (born March 29, 1961) is a Dutch professor, scientist in the field of climate change, sustainability, and transition, and environmental activist.[1][2][3][4] He developed the global transition model TARGETS, which builds on the global model of the Club of Rome.
The topic of this article may not meet Wikipedia's notability guideline for academics. (September 2024) |
Jan Rotmans | |
---|---|
Born | Rotterdam, the Netherlands | March 29, 1961
Citizenship | Dutch |
Alma mater | TU Delft (MS), RIVM (PhD) |
Occupation(s) | Professor, scientist, activist |
Website | janrotmans |
He is a professor of sustainability transitions at DRIFT–Erasmus University Rotterdam and the founder of the National Knowledge and Innovation Center for Transitions (KSI).[5][6][2] Rotmans is also a co-founder of several organizations, including Urgenda Foundation, International Centre for Integrated Assessment and Sustainable Development (ICIS), Dutch Research Institute For Transitions (DRIFT), and Nederland Kantelt.[6]
Rotmans was born on March 29, 1961, in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. After completing his master of science in applied mathematics from TU Delft, he attended The National Institute of Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) and started his PhD research in 1986. Later, in 1990, Rotmans received his PhD on the Integrated Model to Access the Greenhouse Effect (IMAGE) model of climate change.[2][4]
Rotmans started his career in 1992 by becoming the youngest professor in the Netherlands at the University of Maastricht. In 1995, he was associated with the United Nations in New York, working on the harmonization of the integrated climate models and the evaluation of global sustainability policy before establishing ICIS at Maastricht University in 1997. At ICIS, He developed the global transition model TARGETS, which was built on the world model of the Club of Rome.
In the early 2000s, together with John Grin and Johan Schot, he started a national research program on transitions of approximately 22 million euros and the National Transition Research Network KSI, which in turn formed the basis for the European Transition Network. In 2004, he founded the transition research institute DRIFT and started serving as a professor of Transitions and Sustainability at Erasmus University Rotterdam.[6]
Along with Marjan Minnesma, Rotmans established the Urgenda Foundation in 2007 and became its chairman.[6] Through the Urgenda Foundation, he sued the Dutch state and thus forced the government to reduce greenhouse gas emissions in 2015. In addition, he participated in establishing several organizations, including TeamNXT, Nederland Kantelt, Zorgeloos, Education in Transition, and the Gideonsbende in the early 2020s.
As of 2024, Rotmans is a professor of sustainability transitions at DRIFT – Erasmus University Rotterdam, chairman of the Urgenda Foundation, and involved in the sustainability of the Port of Rotterdam for TeamNXT.[5][7][8] He is also associated with other non-profit organizations in the Netherlands.[9][10]
Rotmans founded two scientific journals ('Environmental Modeling' and 'Assessment and Integrated Assessment') and published more than 30 books on sustainability and transitions. In addition, he published more than 300 scientific articles in the fields of sustainability, environment, transitions, and system innovations.
In 2021, he published his book Omarm de Chaos, in which he advises national and international organizations and governments, such as the European Commission, United Nations, World Bank, OECD, Ministries in Scandinavia, Germany, England, the US, Canada, Australia, and Japan, and the European Environment Agency.[11][2][12][13]
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