The following statistics are from the last 5 full calendar years: 2021-2025
Publications
1
Publications co-authored with institutions in Albania
| Title | Type | Publisher | Date Sort ascending | Journal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gap analysis of the Ramsar site network at 50: over 150 important Mediterranean sites for wintering waterbirds omitted | article | Springer-Verlag | Biodiversity and Conservation |
0
Publications by IIASA researchers from Albania
Projects
323
Projects related to Albania
| Name | Start | End Sort ascending | Abbreviation | Classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| International Resource Panel (IRP) Scenario Explorer and material scenarios | 2021 | 2021 | IRP | Global |
| WeObserve: Coordinating citizen observatories across Europe | 2017 | 2021 | WeObserve | Global |
| DGTWIN: The Digital Twin Earth Precursors | 2020 | 2021 | DGTWIN | Global |
| OECDLand: Develop Part Of The Outlook Model To Better Represent Land Use By Using A Forest And Other Landuse Meta- Model | 2020 | 2021 | OECDLand | Global |
| Co-Creating Misinformation-Resilient Societies | 2018 | 2021 | Co-Inform | Global |
| Marginal lands for Growing Industrial Crops: Turning a burden into an opportunity | 2017 | 2021 | MAGIC | Global |
| Embedding climate policies into deep economic transformations | 2018 | 2021 | EconTrans | Global |
| CO-designing the Assessment of Climate CHange costs |
2017 | 2021 | COACCH | Global |
| Greenhouse gas effects of global land-use competition – a biomass balance/land use model based on biophysical accounting | 2016 | 2021 | GELUC | Global |
| Co-development of methods to utilize uncertain multi-model based information on fresh water related hazards of climate change | 2017 | 2021 | CO-MICC | Global |
Pagination
0
Projects sponsored by funders from Albania
Engagement
10
Number of times participants from Albania joined IIASA events
2
IIASA staff visits to Albania
People
1
- Women
- Men
Staff members from Albania
Events
Focus
Feasible futures
Policy Brief #41, October 2023. Embracing the notion of feasibility, this research shows that the world will probably overshoot
1.5°C, largely owing to low institutional capacity. Energy demand reduction and electrification are two options to turn down the heat, and addressing weak institutions is crucial.
In pursuit of resilience at 1.5°C
Options Magazine, Winter 2022: How would your community cope if floods or wildfires raced through it? With a 1.5°C rise in global temperature drawing nearer, such crises become more likely, but it is hard to gauge how prepared communities are. Does everyone have savings in place? Could schools remain open? Do people know the flood drill?