Hassan’s research focuses on nature finance, focusing on financing nature recovery. His other research interests include helping financial institutions decarbonise their financed emissions, nature and health, climate risk, air pollution and net zero transitions across businesses and governments.
I specialize in complex systems science. My current research focus on nature finance. This encompass the research on methods for assessing risks, bankable markets in nature, financing nature recovery, and innovative financial instruments. I have interest in systems modeling, policy analysis, water resource research and sustainability analysis.
Dr Ben Caldecott is the founding Director of the Oxford Sustainable Finance Group at the University of Oxford Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment. At the University of Oxford, he is the inaugural Lombard Odier Associate Professor and Senior Research Fellow of Sustainable Finance, the first ever endowed professorship of sustainable finance, and a Supernumerary Fellow at Oriel College, Oxford. Ben is also the founding Director and Principal Investigator of the UK Centre for Greening Finance & Investment (CGFI), established by UK Research and Innovation in 2021 as the national centre to accelerate the adoption and use of climate and environmental data and analytics by financial institutions internationally.
Nathalie Seddon is Professor of Biodiversity and Founding Director of the Nature-based Solutions Initiative in the Departments of Biology and Geography (Smith School for Enterprise and the Environment) at the University of Oxford. She is also Director of the Agile Initiative, co-lead of the Biodiversity and Society Programme and Leverhulme Centre for Nature Recovery, and is a Senior Research Fellow at Wadham College.
In 2021, she co-founded the Oxford University Social Venture, Nature-based Insights of which she is non-executive Director.
Julia’s research focuses on how to achieve a climate and environmental risk resilient financial system by integrating climate and environmental considerations into financial decision-making. She works on climate transition risk metrics, decision-useful climate and environmental commitments, corporate climate and environmental disclosures, and on sovereign climate and environmental risk and resilience analysis.
Cameron Hepburn is Professor of Environmental Economics at the University of Oxford, and Director of the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment. He also serves as the Director of the Economics of Sustainability Programme, based at the Institute for New Economic Thinking at the Oxford Martin School.