Confirmed speakers

Martial HAEFFELIN Martial HAEFFELIN
Martial Haeffelin is a senior research scientist in atmospheric remote sensing research. He conducted research on the effect of clouds on the global Earth radiation budget at the NASA Langley Research Center from 1993-2001. In 2002, he initiated a surface-based atmospheric observation program for CNRS-IPSL, developed a world-class atmospheric observatory located at Ecole Polytechnique, and directed this program for nearly 20 years. He is currently the Deputy Director of Institut Pierre Simon Laplace, in charge of Earth Observations, and acts as scientific director of ACTRIS-FR a French research infrastructure dedicated to support climate research.
Mustapha Meftah Mustapha Meftah
M. Meftah hold a PhD in Earth Sciences and Solar Physics and have an accreditation to supervise research in Astronomy and Astrophysics. He has also an Engineer degree from high French engineering school in physics and aerospace engineering (spacecraft, payload, orbitography, mechanic, thermic, optic, …). He has more than 22 years of research experience in the field of space instrumentation, space physics, solar physics, atmospheric physics, climatology, education (teaching responsibilities until PhD students) and outreach. He is currently the Head of a Lab small satellites program and the Principal Investigator of two CubeSats missions. He is an international specialist of space instrumentation and member of COSPAR group to “provide experience in building” space flight systems.
Emmanuelle Porcher Emmanuelle Porcher
Emmanuelle Porcher is a professor at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, and director of the Center of Ecology and Conservation Sciences. As an ecologist and evolutionary biologist, she studies the impacts of human activities on biodiversity, with a focus on the effects of agriculture, as well as and climate change. Using monitoring data from citizen science programs, she aims to identify the drivers of changes in wild plants and their pollinators. She teaches ecology at the Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle and at Sciences Po.
Alessandra Giannini Alessandra Giannini
Alessandra Giannini joined the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique two years ago thanks to a Make Our Planet Great Again grant. Her research focus is the African Sahel. She conclusively demonstrated the oceanic origin of the persistent drought that devastated the region through the 1970s and 1980s, then linked it to the unique post-World War II combination of aerosols and greenhouse gases. She is currently working with colleagues in the UN World Food Programme to describe the climatic vulnerability of food security in Senegal.
Fabio D'Andrea Fabio D'Andrea
Fabio D'Andrea is a senior researcher at LMD. His research interests include midlatitude atmospheric dynamics, the study of extreme climatic events, most notably heatwaves, and the physics of moist convection. He is also interested in the interaction of climate and social sciences.
Corinne Robert Corinne Robert
Corinne Robert is a senior researcher at INRAE, unit ECOSYS. She is a specialist in ecological regulations in agroecological systems. She is interested in biodiversity at different scales. She is involved in projects that aim to design socio-ecological trajectories to reduce pesticide use. She teaches Agroecology at the Ecole Normale Supérieure at CERES. She is coordinator of the scientific domain on "Biodiversity in the Agroecosystem" for the AgroEcoSystem INRAE division.
Pierre-Antoine Précigout Pierre-Antoine Précigout
Pierre Antoine Precigout is doing his research at the ECOSYS lab (INRAE). His works focus in the fields of pathogen regulation in agroecological systems. He is interested in modelling "plant-pathogen" interactions in cultivated field and landscape. He is currently working on models of impact of crop diversification at different spatial-temporal scales.
Philippe Ciais Philippe Ciais
Philippe Ciais is a researcher at the Laboratory of Climate and Environmental Sciences (LSCE) of the French Atomic Energy and Alternative Energies Commission (CEA), research unit on climate change at the Pierre Simon Laplace Institute (IPSL) . He is a physicist and works on the global carbon cycle of planet Earth, climate change, ecology and geosciences. He is a member of the French Academy of Sciences.
Jean-Charles Dupont Jean-Charles Dupont
Assistant physicist, he is attached to SIRTA and has a threefold mission at the level of the SIRTA observatory: service activities by being responsible for the aspects of measurements and instrumental protocols, research activities with as main thematic axis the processes controlling the life cycle fog and finally teaching activities with the management of projects, internships and summer schools with students mainly from Ile-de-France.
Cyril Crevoisier Cyril Crevoisier
Cyril Crevoisier is Director of Research at LMD-IPSL and chair of the Earth Observation scientific committee of CNES. His research focuses on the use of satellite remote sensing to study essential climate variables. He is involved in the conception and exploitation of various satellite missions devoted to the monitoring of anthropogenic greenhouse gases and leads the development of field campaigns combining ground-based, airborne and satellite observations that aim at characterising atmospheric composition.
Thomas Dubos Thomas Dubos
Thomas Dubos is a professor at Ecole Polytechnique and researcher at LMD/IPSL. His core research interests lie mainly in geophysical fluid dynamics, from synoptic-scale, quasi-two-dimensional turbulence to meso-scale breeze circulations and small-scale boundary-layer turbulence. Recently, he has focused on identifying fundamental physical and mathematical structures involved in physical models of atmospheric and oceanic motion and on leveraging them to facilitate the design and implementation of versatile and efficient numerical models of the atmosphere.
Caroline Muller Caroline Muller
Caroline Muller is a researcher at the laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique. Her interests lie in the fields of geophysical fluid dynamics and climate science. She is particularly interested in the study of processes which are too small in space and time to be explicitly resolved in coarse-resolution General Circulation Models (GCMs) used for climate prediction. Important examples are waves in the ocean, and clouds in the atmosphere.
Serge Fdida Serge Fdida
Serge Fdida is a professor of computer science at the Faculty of Science and Engineering of Sorbonne University. His research area covers Internet technologies and architectures. He coordinates several European and international research programs on these topics. He also has a strong experience in technology transfer and commercialization. He was director of a joint laboratory with Thalès, co-founder of the company Qosmos and vice-president of the national telecommunications research network. He has held several research management and evaluation positions at CNRS, INRIA and other international organizations. He was successively vice-president in charge of Europe and international partnerships from 2012 to 2017.
Hervé Le Treut Hervé Le Treut
Hervé Le Treut is a climatologist, specialist in numerical climate simulation. Former Director of the Pierre-Simon Laplace Institute, he has spent most of his career at the CNRS, and is now a professor at Sorbonne-University. He has also been a professor at Ecole Polytechnique for 30 years. He is a member of the French Academy of Sciences.
Cathy Clerbaux Cathy Clerbaux
Cathy Clerbaux is Director of Research at LATMOS-IPSL. She is internationally recognized as an expert in satellite remote sensing for the study of atmospheric composition changes. She is involved in the conception of satellite missions, with contributions on the definition of the instrument (interactions with industry and spatial agencies), on the development of processing algorithms and on scientific exploitation of millions of measurements.
Sabrina Speich Sabrina Speich
Sabrina Speich is full professor of Oceanography and Climate Sciences at the Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS) – Paris Sciences Lettre (PSL) University and she is member of the Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique (LMD) within the French climate Institute Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL). Her research focuses on ocean scale-interactions and ocean-atmosphere dynamics, and how they affect the Earth climate and marine ecosystems under global warming. She is a world-recognized expert in ocean modeling as well as in organizing wide programs of in situ observations.
Robert Vautard Robert Vautard
Robert Vautard is a senior researcher at CNRS. He is specialist of regional climate change and extreme climate events. He is leading one of the chapters of the future IPCC report on climate information for regional impacts and risk assessment. He has published more than 220 articles in peer-reviewed literature. He also developed modeling of air quality and the CHIMERE model that is used in several places worldwide to forecast air quality. Robert Vautard is director of Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace and of the Paris Climate Graduate School.
Francesco d'Ovidio Francesco d'Ovidio
Francesco d'Ovidio is a CNRS researcher working on the coupling between the physical processes and marine ecosystems in the open ocean. He is the responsible of the PROTEO group (fine scale ocean processes) at LOCEAN-IPSL and member of the Science Team for the future NASA/CNES SWOT satellite mission. His interests include remote sensing, Lagrangian methods, and the science basis for marine protected areas.
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