Phone: +47 22 00 47 17 /
E-mail: iulia.marginean@cicero.oslo.no
Research Assistant in Climate Impacts Group
Iulia Marginean graduated from an Erasmus Mundus programme in environmental engineering and management (MSc. Joint European Master in Environmental Studies) and aims to specialize in climate change research. She is interested in the synergies between climate extremes and air pollution and their socio-economic impacts. Methodologically, she explores different tools for spatial and quantitative data analysis.
Projects
- ClimINVEST - Tools for climate-resilient investment Climate change is increasingly affecting financial assets across the globe. The ClimINVEST project brings scientists and investors together to develop tailored tools for assessing physical climate risk and identifying climate-resilient investment opportunities.
- Exhaustion Air pollution is currently the largest environmental killer in Europe, causing 500,000 premature deaths annually. Heatwaves can make air pollution more lethal and cause more heart and lung diseases. Together with Universitetet i Oslo (UiO) the Norwegian Institute of Public Health and 11 other European institutions CICERO will help increase European resilience towards climate change.
Publications and outreach at CICERO
Gå til: Report/dissertation Conference lecture and academic presentation
Report/dissertation
2020
- Florian Gallo, Violaine Lepousez, Sophie Dejonckheere, Jana Sillmann, Christa Clapp, Miriam Stackpole Dahl, Iulia Marginean, Monserrat Budding, Romain Hubert, Michel Cordona, 2020 Assessing climate physical risks for financial decision makers - Common methodologies,challenges and case studies EN
2019
- Asbjørn Torvanger, Kristina Alnes, Alexander Oliver Berg, Iulia Marginean, 2019 Climate science for the financial sector: Managing climate risk in Norway and Sweden EN
Conference lecture and academic presentation
2020
- Christa Clapp, Jana Sillmann, Kristina Alnes, Iulia Marginean, Miriam Stackpole Dahl, 2020 Physical climate risk for banks. Data availability and accessibility challenges. EN
Web articles
- Human health under threat by extreme heat and air pollution Extreme heat and high levels of air pollution create a major and immediate threat to human health. How should climate research respond?