THE GREAT DISRUPTION MEETS THE GREAT ACCELERATION: COVID-19, CITIES, AND THE 21st CENTURY ENVIRONMENT
About this Event
We are really excited to invite you to our first virtual NYHSS webinar organized by the New York Hungarian Scinetific Society. See you soon on our Zoom virtual webinar! The space is limited and the zoom link can be accessed by registering on eventbrite. All tickets will benefit the Szent-Gyorgyi Award.
REGISTER HERE!
Webinar: A discussion by Professor Charles Vörösmarty, PhD around how COVID-19 interacts with the larger challenges of the modern urban environment. A comparison of the disruption of the moment (i.e., COVID-19) to the broader environmental challenges facing us in the anthropocene with focus on the cities and interleave some key environmental issues with those of social equity and justice.
Speaker : Dr. Charles Vörösmarty PhD
Director, Environmental Sciences Initiative
Director, Environmental Crossroads Group
Professor of Civil Engineering, The City College of New York
Charles J. Vörösmarty, Ph.D., is the Founding Director of the Environmental Sciences Initiative. Dr. Vörösmarty’s research focuses on the development of computer models and geospatial data sets used in synthesis studies of the interactions among the water cycle, climate, biogeochemistry and anthropogenic activities. His studies are built around local, regional and continental to global-scale modeling of water balance, discharge, constituent fluxes in river systems and the analysis of the impacts of large-scale water engineering on the terrestrial water cycle. His work on human-water interactions includes earth system modeling of the Northeastern United States, development and analysis of databases depicting reservoir construction worldwide and how they generate downstream coastal zone risks, and global threats to human water security and aquatic biodiversity.
Dr. Vörösmarty routinely provides scientific guidance to a variety of U.S. and international water consortia. He is a founding member and current co-Chair of the Global Water System Project that represents the input of several hundred international scientists under the International Council for Science’s Global Environmental Change Programs. He is spearheading efforts to develop global-scale indicators of water stress and is working with chief United Nations delegates who are negotiating the Rio+20 Sustainable Development Goals. He has served on a broad array of national panels, including the U.S. Arctic Research Commission (appointed by Presidents Bush and Obama), the NASA Earth Science Subcommittee, the National Research Council Committee on Hydrologic Science as Chair, a member of the NRC Review Committee on the U.S. Global Change Research Program, the National Science Foundation’s Arctic System Science Program Committee, and the Arctic HYDRA International Polar Year Planning Team. He was a consultant to the 24-agency United Nations World Water Assessment Programme and represented the International Council of Scientific Unions at the UN Commission on Sustainable Development meetings.
Before coming to the ASRC and The City College of New York, Dr. Vörösmarty was a Research Full Professor at the Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space at the University of New Hampshire, where he was founder and director of its Water Systems Analysis Group.
In 2019, Dr. Vörösmarty was the recipient of the Hungarian Order of Merit.