china and iiasa highlights (2008-2014)
DESCRIPTION
China and IIASA Highlights (2008-2014). April 2014. CONTENTS. Summary National Member Organization Some Leading Chinese Personalities Associated with IIASA Research Partners Research Collaborations: Selected Highlights Capacity Building Further Information . SUMMARY (2008-2014). - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
China and IIASA Highlights (2008-2014)
April 2014
CONTENTS
1. Summary2. National Member Organization3. Some Leading Chinese Personalities Associated with
IIASA4. Research Partners5. Research Collaborations: Selected Highlights6. Capacity Building7. Further Information
SUMMARY (2008-2014)National Member Organization
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
Membership start date 2002
SUMMARY (2008-2014)National Member Organization
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
Membership start date 2002
Research partners 29 organizations in China
SUMMARY (2008-2014)National Member Organization
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
Membership start date 2002
Research partners 29 organizations in China
Areas of research collaborations
Food security in ChinaSmart ways to clean up China’s airAdvancing energy and integrated assessment modeling in ChinaGlobal Energy Assessment and ChinaWater scarcity in ChinaProjecting changing population and human capital in China Enhancing disaster preparedness in ChinaTerrestrial carbon management in ChinaEvolution of cooperationAdvanced systems analysis
SUMMARY (2008-2014)National Member Organization
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
Membership start date 2002
Research partners 29 organizations in China
Areas of research collaborations
Food security in ChinaSmart ways to clean up China’s airAdvancing energy and integrated assessment modeling in ChinaGlobal Energy Assessment and ChinaWater scarcity in ChinaProjecting changing population and human capital in China Enhancing disaster preparedness in ChinaTerrestrial carbon management in ChinaEvolution of cooperationAdvanced systems analysis
Capacity Building 47 young scientists from China have participated in IIASA’s Young Scientists Summer Program2 in IIASA’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program5 in the Southern African Young Scientists Summer Program
SUMMARY (2008-2014)National Member Organization
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)
Membership start date 2002
Research partners 29 organizations in China
Areas of research collaborations
Food security in ChinaSmart ways to clean up China’s airAdvancing energy and integrated assessment modeling in ChinaGlobal Energy Assessment and ChinaWater scarcity in ChinaProjecting changing population and human capital in China Enhancing disaster preparedness in ChinaTerrestrial carbon management in ChinaEvolution of cooperationAdvanced systems analysis
Capacity Building 47 young scientists from China have participated in IIASA’s Young Scientists Summer Program2 in IIASA’s Postdoctoral Fellowship Program5 in the Southern African Young Scientists Summer Program
Publication output 193 publications
NATIONAL MEMBER ORGANIZATION• National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) • Professor Congqiang Liu, Vice President of the NSFC, is the IIASA
Council Member for China • China NMO committee :
– Prof. Jiming Hao, Tsinghua University– Prof. Kejun Jiang, Energy Research Institute, NDRC– Prof. Xiubin Li, IGSNRR, Chinese Academy of Sciences– Prof. Jiahua Pan, IUES, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences– Prof. Rusong Wang, RCEES, Chinese Academy of Sciences– Prof. Shouyang Wang, AMSS, Chinese Academy of Sciences– Prof. Yiming Wei, Beijing Institute of Technology– Prof. Dawen Yang, Tsinghua University – Prof. Wei Zhang, Tianjin University
• The NMO Secretary for China is Mr. Chuang Zhao, NSFC
SOME LEADING CHINESE PERSONALITIES FROM ACADEMIA AND GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATED WITH IIASA
Jie WangZhenghua Jiang Dadi Zhou
Jing-Yun Fang Liangyu HuiSiwei Cheng
COLLABORATING, RESEARCH & FUNDING PARTNERS
• 29 institutions in China, including: • Beijing Forestry University• Beijing Normal University• Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS)• Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) and many of its institutions• Energy Research Institute, National Development and Reform Commission• Peking University• Shanghai Meteorological Bureau • The State Forestry Administration of the People's Republic of China (SFC) • Tianjin University• Tsinghua University
RESEARCH COLLABORATIONS
Selected Highlights:• Planning the Future of China’s Agriculture• Mapping Nitrogen Scarcity• Modeling Green and Blue Water• Cutting Air Pollution and Greenhouse Gas Emissions
Simultaneously in China• Greenhouse Gas Emissions 2000-2100• Global Energy Assessment and China• Projecting Changing Population in China
PLANNING THE FUTURE OF CHINA’S AGRICULTURE
Projections for China’s production of maize and rice in 2030 (volume per hectare)
MAPPING NITROGEN SCARCITY
Nitrogen Input, Output, Balance
MODELING GREEN AND BLUE WATERWorld water use in 2000
CUTTING AIR POLLUTION AND GREENHOUSE GASE EMSSIONS SIMULTANEOUSLY
• Integrated Assessment Modeling Consortium
includes IIASA & Chinese partners:
GREENHOUSE GAS EMISSIONS 2000-2100
16
MESSAGE(IIASA)
AIM(NIES)
GCAM(PNNL)
IMAGE(PBL)
Source: van Vuuren, D.P., Edmonds, J., Kainuma, M., Riahi, K., Weyant, J. (eds) (2011). Special Issue: The Representative Concentration Pathways in Climatic Change. Climatic Change, 109(1-2).
GLOBAL ENERGY ASSESSMENT AND CHINA
17Source: GEA, 2012: Global Energy Assessment - Toward a Sustainable Future, Cambridge University Press and IIASA
GLOBAL ENERGY ASSESSMENT AND CHINA
18Source: GEA, 2012: Global Energy Assessment - Toward a Sustainable Future, Cambridge University Press and IIASA
• 2009 to date: GEA provides critical input to UN Secretary-General’s Sustainable Energy For All Initiative including defining the aspirational yet feasible objectives: 1. Ensure universal access to modern
energy services2. Double the global rate of
improvements in energy efficiency3. Double the share of renewable
energy in the global energy mix
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINA
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Base Year 2010
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.3 Billion1.3 Billion FemalesMales
1.3 Billion
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINASUSTAINABILITY
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Projections 2030 - SSP1
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.4 Billion FemalesMales
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINASUSTAINABILITY
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Projections 2060 - SSP1
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.1 Billion FemalesMales
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINA
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Base Year 2010
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.3 Billion1.3 Billion FemalesMales
1.3 Billion
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINAFRAGMENTATION
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Projections 2030 - SSP3
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.4 Billion FemalesMales
PROJECTING CHANGING POPULATION IN CHINAFRAGMENTATION
0-45-9
10-1415-1920-2425-2930-3435-3940-4445-4950-5455-5960-6465-6970-7475-7980-8485-8990-9495-99100+
80000 60000 40000 20000 0 20000 40000 60000 80000
China - Projections 2060 - SSP3
Population in Millions
Age
(in
Yea
rs)
1.2 Billion FemalesMales
CAPACITY BUILDING
47 Chinese students won places on IIASA’s Young Scientists Summer Program (YSSP) between 2008
and 2013
POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS• Wei Liu (2012 to present): How changing land use affects ecosystem service
provision and natural hazard vulnerability in Wolong Nature Reserve in China. (1 journal article)
• Xiaojie Chen (2010-2012): Focused on evolutionary dynamics in biological and social systems, especially the emergence and stability of cooperation in social networks, using evolutionary game theory and adaptive dynamics. (16 journal articles).
FURTHER INFORMATION
IIASA and Chinawww.iiasa.ac.at/china
National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) www.nsfc.gov.cn [email protected]