Saskia Werners

Head of VARMAP Division

Education
PhD Adaptation to climate change in land use and water management. Wageningen University and Research Centre, the Netherlands
Education
Visiting Scientist – The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), Nepal
Education
Visiting Scientist - International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), Austria
Education
Complex Systems Summer School, Sante Fe Institute, New Mexico, US
Education
MSc with Distinction in Water Resources Engineering and Management, Civil & Offshore Engineering Department, Heriot-Watt University, UK
Education
MSc Environmental Sciences First Class, Vrije Universiteit, the Netherlands
Education
MSc Experimental Physics First Class, Vrije Universiteit, the Netherlands
Institute
UNU-EHS
Nationality
The Netherlands
Contacts
werners@ehs.unu.edu

Saskia E. Werners' main research interest is adaptation to global change in water management.

To capitalize on our growing capacity to project vulnerabilities, risks and uncertainty, she researches how information services can be embedded in decision-making to provide actors with actionable knowledge at the right moment for adaptive land and water management. Her research covers both short-term adaptive decision making and longer-term adaptation pathway development. By working together and integrating actor perspectives, Dr. Werners aims to increase the actionability of research and empower actors to respond adaptively to change, for example, through experiments with digital technology, such as crowd-sourcing and sharing of weather forecasts. Dr. Werners’ vision is to create climate-resilient development pathways together with actors. This requires conceptual development, as well as capacity-building and offering decision-support. Building on the VARMAP Section’s existing strengths in vulnerability assessment, risk management and adaptive planning, the Section can provide decision support on when to do what towards sustainability and resilient societies. Education and capacity building are necessary elements of this vision for connecting science, policy and UN(U) issues. Next to her commitment to UNU-EHS, Dr. Werners is proud to remain affiliated with Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands.