Wilfried Winiwarter
Senior Research Scholar
Pollution Management Research Group
Energy, Climate, and Environment Program
Contact
Biography
Wilfried Winiwarter is a senior research scholar in the Pollution Management Research Group of the IIASA Energy, Climate, and Environment Program. He originally trained as a chemical engineer and worked as an atmospheric scientist before joining IIASA in 2003. His interest in systems analysis derives from the overarching challenges of climate research. He acquired expertise in the biogeochemical cycle of nitrogen, especially on its anthropogenic impacts. This includes describing methods to minimize the release of ammonia or nitrous oxide into the environment, which are often connected with agricultural activities.Winiwarter started his academic career at the Vienna University of Technology, where he obtained a PhD degree and a postdoctoral qualification for academic teaching (“Habilitation”). Partly in parallel with his IIASA affiliation, he was a senior scientist at the Austrian Institute of Technology (AIT), and also held a two-year term as Professor for Systems Sciences at the University of Graz. Since October 2017, he has been working as Professor of Environmental Chemistry at the Institute of Environmental Engineering, University of Zielona Gora, Poland.
In 2019, he received the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) President’s International Fellowship (PIFI) that was extended in 2021. This fellowship enabled Winiwarter to conduct research with CAS partners at the Center for Agricultural Resources Research in Shijiazhuang, China, and helped to facilitate further work with Chinese partners, formalized in projects with Peking University and Zhejiang University.
Following from his work as the director of the European Center of the International Nitrogen Initiative (2013-26), he also got involved in several assessment activities. Currently, he serves as coordinating lead author to the International Nitrogen Assessment, an initiative to compile state-of-the-art information on environmental nitrogen issues. He is also a coordinating lead author of the Austrian Assessment Report, which brings together scientific information about climate change, the climate crisis, and possible solutions from a single country perspective. Both reports are due to be published in 2025.
Last update: 07 JAN 2025
Publications
Greilinger, M., Schöner, W., Winiwarter, W. , & Kasper-Giebl, A. (2016). Temporal changes of inorganic ion deposition in the seasonal snow cover for the Austrian Alps (1983–2014). Atmospheric Environment 132 141-152. 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2016.02.040.
Winkler, T. & Winiwarter, W. (2015). Scenarios of livestock - related greenhouse gas emissions in Austria. Journal of Integrative Environmental Sciences 12 (S1) 107-119. 10.1080/1943815X.2015.1110186.
Gambhir, A., Napp, T., Hawkes, A., Höglund-Isaksson, L. , Winiwarter, W. , Purohit, P. , Wagner, F. , Bernie, D., & Lowe, J. (2015). The contribution of non-CO2 greenhouse gas mitigation to achieving long-term temperature goals. AVOID 2 WPC2b Report. Grantham Institute, Imperial College London, UK /IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria / Andlinger Center for Energy and the Environment, Princeton University, USA / Met Office Hadley Centre, UK , London, UK.
Ermoliev, Y., Ermolieva, T., Jonas, M. , Obersteiner, M. , Wagner, F. , & Winiwarter, W. (2015). Integrated model for robust emission trading under uncertainties: cost-effectiveness and environmental safety. Technological Forecasting and Social Change 98 234-244. 10.1016/j.techfore.2015.01.003.
Winiwarter, W. , Grizzetti, B., & Sutton, M.A. (2015). Nitrogen pollution in the EU: Best management strategies, regulations, and science needs. [[EM: Air and Waste Management Association's Magazine for Environmental Managers]]; 65:18-23 [Septeber 2015]