Cosmos 500 ident

COSMOS
500


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Carbon Brief’s ranking of the most highly cited climate scientists

Carbon Brief’s Project Cosmos is the largest known database of climate change research, featuring more than 1.8m individual publications.

Every publication has a list of authors – the experts who carried out fieldwork, analysed data and drafted the document itself.

Hundreds of thousands of experts are listed as authors in these studies, books and reports.

Each publication also has a list of references – the other academic works on which the authors drew to develop their research.

Carbon Brief has calculated a citation score for each expert, by counting how many times their publications are referenced by others within the Cosmos database.

The Cosmos 500 ranking shows the most highly cited academics in Carbon Brief’s database, based on their citation score.

(This ranking only counts references from within Carbon Brief’s Cosmos database. This is distinct from the citation count given by, for example, Google Scholar, which counts all references the publication has ever received.)

Topping the Cosmos 500 is French researcher Prof Philippe Ciais, whose work focuses on modelling the global carbon cycle.

In second and third place are Prof Phil Jones and Prof Francis Stuart Chapin III, respectively.

Almost half of the authors in the Cosmos 500 are from institutions in the US, while experts from global south countries account for only 4%.

Additionally, Carbon Brief finds that only 10% of the authors in the Cosmos 500 are women. The first 35 entries of the Cosmos 500 ranking are men.

Carbon Brief also analysed the 107,000 publications that are directly referenced in the IPCC reports, known as the “IPCC-only” section of the Cosmos database.

Prof Detlef P van Vuuren from Utrecht University and PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency is the highest-scoring scientist in this analysis.

Top 20

The
top 20

1
Prof Philippe Ciais
Prof Philippe Ciais

Topping Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking, with a citation score of 69,655, is French researcher Prof Philippe Ciais.

Ciais completed his PhD in 1991. His work focused on using Antarctic ice cores to reconstruct a climate record throughout the Holocene. He then moved to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in the US for his postdoctoral studies.

Ciais returned to France to work at the Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat and de l’Environment (LSCE) in Paris in 1994. Over 2002-17, he worked as head of department and then associate director at LSCE.

Ciais has held many senior roles throughout his career, including as the associate director of the LSCE and co-chair of the Global Carbon Project – an international research project to study the global carbon cycle, whose annual global carbon budget report is the most comprehensive report of its kind.

The bulk of his career has focused on the global carbon cycle. For example, over 2005-13, he was instrumental in coordinating the Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS) – a set of 180 measurement stations across 16 European countries. This has been recognised by the European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures (ESFRI) as a “landmark” infrastructure.

Ciais has also contributed to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), including as a contributing author for the carbon cycle of the fifth assessment cycle’s (AR5) Working Group I (WG1) report in 2013.

In total, according to ResearchGate, Ciais has been listed as an author on almost 1,300 academic studies. His most highly cited study is the 2019 Global Carbon Budget, which has a lengthy author list including many of the other frontrunners of Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking. He has also been an author on numerous high-profile studies.

To allow comparison with their wider academic impact, Carbon Brief has included within the Cosmos 500 rankings each author’s h-index, according to OpenAlex. This metric calculates the wider productivity and citation impact of an author’s publications for all publications that each expert has written – not just those included in the Cosmos database.

With an OpenAlex h-index of 223, one ranking website places Ciais as the 251st most highly cited scientist across all areas of academic study.

Prof Pep Canadell is the director of the Global Carbon Project and has worked closely with Ciais for decades.

He tells Carbon Brief that Ciais’s high research output is due to his “mastery” of interdisciplinary collaborations. He explains that Ciais has always been “open” and “generous” with his colleagues, adding:

“It’s almost like the combination of the super brain that never stops developing ideas and great science, with a very personal ability to relate to people and to make people excited, all through science.”

Prof Corinne Le Quéré – who ranks 140th in the database and has also worked closely with Ciais on the Global Carbon Project – tells Carbon Brief that he is an “unparalleled” scientist. She adds:

“He is generous with ideas, constantly making suggestions to early-career researchers for new angles of exploration and new methods. He seems to remember everything, sharing papers published and underway to stimulate new thinking.”

To mark his position at the top of the Cosmos 500 rankings, Carbon Brief’s Leo Hickman conducted an in-depth interview with Ciais in May 2026, which will be published on June 23.

2
Prof Phil Jones
Prof Phil Jones

Prof Phil Jones, an emeritus professor at the University of East Anglia’s school of environmental sciences in the UK, takes the second spot in Carbon Brief’s ranking with a citation score of 66,375.

Jones received his PhD in hydrology at the University of Newcastle in 1977, then moved to the University of East Anglia’s Climatic Research Unit (CRU) as a senior research associate.

He was promoted to director of the research unit in 1998, stepping down in 2016 after an 18-year tenure. In July 2022, he became an emeritus professor – an honorary academic title typically given to retired professors who may remain affiliated with a university.

Jones is best-known for his pioneering work assembling observational datasets. He was instrumental in creating the Climatic Research Unit gridded Time Series (CRU TS) dataset – a widely used time-series featuring measurements including temperature, cloud cover and rainfall, which Jones still helps to update on a monthly basis.

Jones has published almost 500 studies. Many of his most highly cited academic studies describe updates to the CRU TS dataset.

He was also central in developing the HadCRUT dataset – a temperature record stretching back to 1850, which is one of just a handful of datasets that the World Meteorological Organisation uses to track global warming.

Dr Tim Osborn, who succeeded Jones as director of the CRU, tells Carbon Brief that these temperature records “underpin” many key areas of climate science.

For example, he says that the records are crucial for “detection and attribution” of global warming, allowing scientists to study the record of human warming and “pick apart the human influences from the natural influences”.

Jones took on a leading role in the IPCC reports related to detention and attribution. In the third assessment cycle (AR3), he was a contributing author in the chapter on “detection of climate change and attribution of causes”, while in the fourth assessment cycle (AR4), he was a coordinating lead author in the chapter on “observations: surface and atmospheric climate change”.

Jones has an h-index of 155, according to OpenAlex.

Osborn tells Carbon Brief that Jones was “very good at identifying opportunities”. For example, he says that Jones was key in pulling together palaeoclimate records, to give a global view of “the variability of climate at large scales”. This work is an important part of Jones’ legacy in climate science, he says.

Jones was involved in the so-called “Climategate” controversy, in which thousands of emails between climate scientists were stolen from a UEA server and selectively released online in an attempt to undermine COP15 in Copenhagen in 2009. These events were the subject of a 2021 BBC One film. He was cleared by multiple investigations, which concluded that the “rigour and honesty” of Jones and his colleagues was not in doubt.

3
Prof Francis Stuart Chapin III
Prof Francis Stuart Chapin III

The ecologist Prof Francis Stuart Chapin III takes the third spot in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking, with a score of 57,432.

Chapin, now retired, is a professor emeritus at the University of Alaska’s Institute of Arctic Biology.

He has held many senior positions, including as a principal investigator of the Bonanza Creek long-term ecological research programme, director of the graduate educational programme in resilience and adaptation at the University of Alaska, and president of the Ecological Society of America.

Chapin was an author on a highly cited and influential 2009 Nature feature, which set out the “planetary boundaries” framework for the first time.

The study defines a set of interlinked thresholds that, it says, would ensure a “safe operating space for humanity” and its authors warn that crossing these thresholds “could have disastrous consequences”.

The study is referenced more than 29,000 times, according to Google Scholar, and the planetary boundaries framework has become a well-known and widely used metric for assessing risk.

He is also the first-author of a highly cited review study, published in Nature in 2000, which states that human activity has “triggered the sixth major extinction event in the history of life”, with “profound consequences for services that humans derive from ecosystems”.

Chapin has also contributed to IPCC reports, including serving as a contributing author to the “polar regions” chapter of the special report on the ocean and cryosphere in a changing climate in 2019.

His h-index of 168 is slightly higher than second-placed Prof Phil Jones. This indicates that, although he is less influential than Phil Jones in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos database of climate science, his work is marginally more influential in broader academic circles.

US ecologist Prof Steward Pickett followed Chapin as president of the Ecological Society of America and worked closely with him over many years. (Pickett referred to Chapin as “Terry” throughout the interview, noting that “nobody call[s] him Francis.”)

Pickett tells Carbon Brief that Chapin is “one of ecology’s rare synthetic thinkers” – meaning that he is able to pull together a broad range of different topics when tackling a problem. He explains that Chapin’s ideas of synthesising biology, geography and human activity into ecosystem science will leave a lasting legacy on the field.

He also praises Chapin for his ability to work with a wide range of researchers, explaining that he has always shown a deep “kindness, humility and respect” for his colleagues.

4
Dr Gerald Meehl
Dr Gerald Meehl

At number four in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking is Dr Gerald Meehl – a senior scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in the US, with a citation score of 55,138.

Meehl heads the Earth system predictability section of NCAR and has served on a wide range of boards and committees, including as co-chair of the Community Earth System Model (CESM) climate variability and change working group.

Meehl is an author on multiple IPCC assessment reports, including working as a lead author on the near-term climate change chapter for AR5.

He was the lead author on a highly cited 2005 study, published in Science, which found that, even if CO2 levels in the atmosphere had stabilised in 2000, “we are already committed to further global warming of about another half degree and an additional 320% sea level rise caused by thermal expansion by the end of the 21st century”.

5
Prof Carl Folke
Prof Carl Folke

In fifth position is Prof Carl Folke, co-founder and chair of the board of Stockholm Resilience Centre at the University of Stockholm, with a citation score of 52,438.

Folke’s most highly cited study as a lead author is a Global Environmental Change study published in 2006, titled: “Resilience: the emergence of a perspective for social-ecological systems analyses.”

He also worked with Chapin – ranked third in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 database – on the influential 2009 Nature feature on planetary boundaries. Many of his other most highly cited research publications also describe updates to the planetary boundaries framework.

Folke has held many senior positions, including founder and chair of the Scientific Committee of the Anthropocene Laboratory and former director of the Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

6
Prof Detlef van Vuuren
Prof Detlef van Vuuren

Prof Detlef van Vuuren, a professor at Utrecht University’s faculty of geosciences and a senior researcher at the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, ranks sixth in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500, with a citation score of 49,721.

Carbon Brief has also analysed the 107,000 unique studies, reports and books that are directly referenced in the IPCC reports. This subset of data is known as the “IPCC-only” section of the Cosmos database. Van Vuuren is the highest-ranking author in this database and achievements are discussed more below. (See: “IPCC-only ranking.”)

7
Dr Kevin Trenberth
Dr Kevin Trenberth

At number seven, with a citation score of 45,751, is Dr Kevin Trenberth – a “distinguished scholar” at NCAR and an honorary academic in the department of physics in New Zealand’s University in Auckland.

Trenberth has held many senior positions, including as chair of the World Climate Research Programme’s observation and assimilation panel and global energy and water exchanges scientific steering group.

Trenberth has also been a lead author on multiple IPCC reports.

8
Prof Colin Prentice
Prof Colin Prentice

Prof Colin Prentice from Imperial College London takes the eighth spot in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500, with a citation score of 44,836.

Prentice’s work centres on how plants react to changes in the climate. He is director of the Leverhulme Centre for Wildfires, Environment and Society, which was launched in 2019.

9
Prof Pierre Friedlingstein
Prof Pierre Friedlingstein

Prof Pierre Friedlingstein, chair of mathematical modelling of climate systems at the University of Exeter, takes the ninth position with a citation score of 44,673.

Friedlingstein is part of the Global Carbon Project team, which produces an annual update on global carbon emissions and stores. He is the lead author on his most highly cited study – the 2019 Global Carbon Budget, on which Cosmos 500 frontrunner Prof Philippe Ciais is also an author.

10
Prof David Tilman
Prof David Tilman

Rounding off the top 10 is Prof David Tilman – professor and presidential chair in ecology at the University of Minnesota, with a score of 43,411. He is director of the university’s Cedar Creek Ecosystem Science Reserve.


The next 10 authors in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking are, in order:

  1. Dr Jean‐François Lamarque is a former senior scientist at the NCAR and chair of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP). Lamarque’s work focuses on Earth-system modelling and he is an author on multiple IPCC reports.
  2. Prof Ronald Stouffer is a meteorologist and adjunct professor at the University of Arizona. He was formerly the head of the climate and ecosystems group at the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. He is an author on multiple IPCC reports.
  3. Prof Keywan Riahi is the director of the energy, climate and environment programme at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria. He is an author on multiple IPCC reports. (See below for more on Riahi.)
  4. Prof Stephen Carpenter is an ecologist from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and director of the centre for limnology – the study of inland aquatic ecosystems.
  5. Dr William Collins is the associate laboratory director of the earth and environmental sciences area at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His work focuses on climate modelling and he is an author on multiple IPCC reports.
  6. Prof Dennis Lettenmaier is a hydrologist and distinguished professor of geography at the UCLA’s Institute of Environmental Sustainability.
  7. Prof Scott Doney is a marine scientist at the University of Virginia, specialising in biogeochemical modelling. He is an IPCC report author and served during the Biden administration as the assistant director for ocean climate science and policy at the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy.
  8. Prof John Seinfeld is a professor of chemical engineering at Caltech’s division of engineering and applied science in Los Angeles, where his work focuses on atmospheric science.
  9. Dr Karl Taylor is the director of the programme for climate model diagnosis and intercomparison at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California. He is an IPCC report author.
  10. Prof Christopher Field is the director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment in California and professor of interdisciplinary environmental studies.

Other notable authors

At number 25 is marine ecologist Dr Carlos Duarte, a distinguished professor at the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia. Duarte has contributed to IPCC reports, including as a contributing author on IPCC’s AR5 Working Group II (WG2) chapter on coastal systems and low-lying areas.

Climate scientist Dr James Hansen, adjunct professor at Columbia University, takes spot 28.

In 1988, Hansen testified before a US Senate committee, stating that he could declare with “99% confidence” that a rise in global temperatures was driven by human activity. The Guardian called Hansen’s testimony the “first warning to a mass audience about global warming”.

At number 43 is Prof Sonia Seneviratne, a professor of land-climate dynamics at the department of environmental systems science at ETH Zurich.

She was a lead author of the IPCC’s 2018 special report on global warming of 1.5C and is vice-chair of WG1 for the upcoming seventh assessment cycle.

The 44th spot goes to Argentine meteorologist Prof Eugenia Kalnay, who died in 2024. Kalnay held many senior positions including as director of environmental modelling at the US National Centers for Environmental Prediction. She was the lead author on the second most cited study in the Cosmos 500 rankings, namely, “The NCEP/NCAR 40-Year Reanalysis Project”.

The majority of experts in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 ranking are men from the global north.

Almost half of all experts in the Cosmos 500 are from the US. The next highest-ranking countries are the UK and Germany, with 17% and 7%, respectively. Meanwhile, only 4% of authors are from countries in the global south, two-thirds of whom are from China.

Carbon Brief finds that only 10% of the authors in the Cosmos 500 are women. The first 35 entries of the Cosmos 500 ranking are men.

The highest placed female author is Elinor Ostrom, the US political economist who was awarded the Nobel memorial prize in economic sciences in 2009, three years before she died.

It is worth noting that physical scientists and economists who are involved in large projects, such as the Global Carbon Project and the production of core climate models, are likely to rank highly in Carbon Brief’s Cosmos 500 because their models and data are reference points for a wide range of other climate research.

IPCC-only rankings

The Cosmos 500 ranking analyses the full 1.8m publications in Carbon Brief’s database of climate science.

However, due to the IPCC’s pivotal role within climate science, Carbon Brief has also analysed the 107,000 unique studies, reports and books that are directly referenced across all the IPCC reports published since 1990. This subset of data is known as the “IPCC-only” section of the database.

Prof Detlef van Vuuren

Prof Detlef P van Vuuren is the highest-scoring scientist in Carbon Brief’s IPCC-only database.

Van Vuuren is a professor of integrated assessment of global environmental change at Utrecht University and senior researcher at the PBL Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency, where he leads the IMAGE integrated assessment modeling team.

He also sits on the board of the Integrated Assessment Modelling Consortium, the EAT Lancet Commission, the Earth Commission and the Global Carbon Project.

Van Vuuren is a leading figure in the development of emissions scenarios. He is the lead author on a highly cited study, published in 2011, which provides an overview of “representation concentration pathways” – the scenarios that underpinned the IPCC’s AR5.

He is also the lead author on a recent study introducing the scenario framework for the seventh coupled model intercomparison project (CMIP7) – the climate modelling that will feed into AR7.

To mark his position at the top of the “IPCC-only” Cosmos 500 rankings, Carbon Brief’s Leo Hickman conducted an in-depth interview with van Vuuren in May 2026, which will be published on June 23.

Prof Keywan Riahi

Sitting in second place in the IPCC-only rankings is Prof Keywan Riahi – the director of the energy, climate and environment programme at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis in Austria.

Riahi is also a visiting professor of energy systems analysis at the Graz University of Technology and serves as a fellow at the Colorado School of Mines.

In 2021, UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres appointed Riahi to a 10-person panel advising on science, technology and innovation regarding the UN’s 2030 sustainable development goals.

In 2022, Riahi was appointed to the European scientific advisory board on climate change, which is described as ”a point of reference for the European Union on scientific knowledge relating to climate change”. He is also a member of the scientific advisory board of Vienna.

Riahi has worked with van Vuuren on many key studies focused on emissions scenarios.

In third position is Prof Philippe Ciais – who ranks first in the full Cosmos 500 rankings. (See above.)

Other notable authors

The IPCC-only rankings feature many notable climate experts who are listed less prominently in the main Cosmos 500 rankings.

For example, Prof Peter Smith, chair of plant and soil science at the University of Aberdeen, ranks fifth in the IPCC-only rankings, but at number 32 in the full Cosmos 500. Smith is director of the Scottish Climate Change Centre of Expertise and has served as an author on multiple IPCC reports.

The highest placed female author is Prof Sonia Seneviratne at position 11, compared to her ranking of 43 in the full Cosmos 500. (See above.)

Prof Joeri Rogelj – director of research at the Grantham Institute and professor of climate science and policy at the Centre for Environmental Policy at Imperial College London – sits at position 13 in the IPCC-only rankings.

Roglej is a lead author on the annual UN “emissions gap” reports and an author on multiple IPCC reports.

At position 17 is Prof Peter Stott MBE, professor of detection and attribution at the University of Exeter and researcher at the UK Met Office Hadley Centre.

Stott is the lead author on what is widely considered to be the first study to attribute an extreme-weather to human-caused climate change. Published in 2004, the study found that human-caused climate change at least doubled the likelihood of the deadly 2003 European heatwave.

Prof Richard Betts MBE sits in position 29. Betts is head of climate impacts research at the Met Office Hadley Centre and a chair of climate impacts at the University of Exeter. He led the writing of the technical report for the UK’s third climate change risk assessment.

Both Betts and Stott have contributed to multiple IPCC reports.

Notable climate scientists in the top 50 of the IPCC-only ranking also include:


The rankings

Rank
Name
Citation count
h index
Country
Institution
1Philippe Ciais69,655223FranceUniversité Paris-Saclay
2P. D. Jones66,375155UKUniversity of East Anglia
3F. Stuart Chapin57,432168USUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks
4Gerald A. Meehl55,138117USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
5Carl Folke52,438144SwedenStockholm University
6Detlef P. van Vuuren49,721148NetherlandsNetherlands Environmental Assessment Agency
7Kevin E. Trenberth45,751122USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
8I. Colin Prentice44,836115UKImperial College London
9Pierre Friedlingstein44,673139UKUniversity of Exeter
10David Tilman43,411180USUniversity of Minnesota
11Jean‐François Lamarque43,253128USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
12Ronald J. Stouffer42,74085USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
13Keywan Riahi41,414112AustriaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
14Stephen R. Carpenter39,567145USUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison
15William D. Collins38,04169USUnited States Department of Energy
16Dennis P. Lettenmaier37,296145USUniversity of Washington
17Scott C. Doney36,332129USWoods Hole Oceanographic Institution
18John H. Seinfeld35,807185USCalifornia Institute of Technology
19Karl E. Taylor35,53969USLawrence Livermore National Laboratory
20Christopher B. Field35,422143USCarnegie Institution for Science
21Josep G. Canadell35,168130AustraliaAustralian Government
22Paul J. Crutzen35,139139GermanyMax Planck Society
23A. J. Simmons34,34467UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
24W. Neil Adger34,340103UKUniversity of Exeter
25Carlos M. Duarte34,106178Saudi ArabiaConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
26Robert B. Jackson33,310167USStanford University
27Filippo Giorgi33,238120ItalyThe Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics (ICTP)
28James E. Hansen33,221111USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
29Peter B. Reich33,207204USUniversity of Minnesota
30Meinrat O. Andreae33,186154GermanyMax Planck Society
31Stephen Sitch32,899126GermanyUniversity of Exeter
32Pete Smith32,836171UKUniversity of Aberdeen
33B. N. Holben32,580141USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
34John M. Wallace32,052104USUniversity of Washington
35Jonathan A. Foley31,73486USUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison
36Elinor Ostrom31,624130USIndiana University
37Peter M. Vitousek31,217145USStanford University
38Harold A. Mooney31,121131CanadaStanford University
39Lisa V. Alexander30,88780AustraliaUNSW Sydney
40Drew Shindell30,735124USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
41Steven W. Running30,535120USUniversity of Montana
42Masao Kanamitsu30,44650USUniversity of California San Diego
43Sonia I. Seneviratne30,360136SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
44Eugenia Kalnay30,31573USUniversity of Maryland, College Park
45Shilong Piao30,301167ChinaPeking University
46Markus Reichstein29,890135GermanyMax Planck Society
47Jerry M. Melillo29,678135USMarine Biological Laboratory
48John E. Janowiak29,51235USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
49Dennis Baldocchi29,416154USUniversity of California, Berkeley
50Richard A. Feely29,167110USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
51Laurent Bopp29,118114FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
52Gordon B. Bonan29,075105USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
53Roy L. Jenne28,66718USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
54Markku Kulmala28,445179FinlandUniversity of Helsinki
55R. A. Houghton28,430117USWoodwell Climate Research Center
56Wallace S. Broecker28,270121USColumbia University
57Ove Hoegh‐Guldberg28,014121AustraliaThe University of Queensland
58Brian J. Hoskins27,84495UKUniversity of Reading
59Jorge L. Sarmiento27,821107ColombiaPrinceton University
60Eric F. Wood27,775140USPrinceton University
61Gianpaolo Balsamo27,72172UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
62Jean‐Raymond Bidlot27,71748UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
63Reto Knutti27,590102SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
64Ranga B. Myneni27,154132USBoston University
65James T. Randerson27,144115USUniversity of California, Irvine
66Elías Hólm27,13818UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
67Manuel Fuentes27,10810UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
68Terry P. Hughes27,005102AustraliaJames Cook University
69Yadvinder Malhi27,002151UKUniversity of Oxford
70Magdalena Balmaseda26,96672UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
71Peter M. Cox26,70897UKUniversity of Exeter
72M. R. van den Broeke26,670125NetherlandsUtrecht University
73Brian Walker26,64474USAustralian Government
74Josep Peñuelas26,565185SpainCERCA Institution
75Shang‐Ping Xie26,508123GermanyUniversity of California San Diego
76Daniel J. Jacob26,187170USHarvard University
77Kerry Emanuel26,102117USMassachusetts Institute of Technology
78Yoram J. Kaufman26,097110IsraelNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
79V. Ramanathan26,082112USUniversity of California San Diego
80Aiguo Dai26,03594USUniversity at Albany, State University of New York
81David M. Lawrence26,023112USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
82Suranjana Saha25,90621USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
83Muthuvel Chelliah25,90421USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
84Marten Scheffer25,890132NetherlandsWageningen University & Research
85Dick Dee25,80447USEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
86Graham D. Farquhar25,730138AustraliaAustralian National University
87Oliviér Boucher25,613113FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
88Guido R. van der Werf25,560102NetherlandsVrije Universiteit Amsterdam
89Navin Ramankutty25,55388CanadaUniversity of British Columbia
90Steven C. Wofsy25,433135USHarvard University
91Frank Dentener25,338123NetherlandsEuropean Union
92Johan Rockström25,280110GermanyStockholm University
93Patricia de Rosnay25,18963FranceEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
94Isaac M. Held25,18494USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
95Anton Beljaars25,17060UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
96John S. Woollen25,08317USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
97Hai Cheng25,070122ChinaXi'an Jiaotong University
98Robert Kistler25,01913USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
99W. Higgins24,86520USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
100R Core Team24,6961International
101Peter Bechtold24,68147UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
102Wilfried Thuiller24,673142FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
103S. J. Johnsen24,415100DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen
104Jean‐Noël Thépaut24,16345UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
105Nicolas Gruber24,151106SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
106Nicholas J Shackleton24,11999UKUniversity of Cambridge
107Ruth DeFries24,082114USColumbia University
108Bin Wang24,055117USUniversity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
109Ernst‐Detlef Schulze23,958143GermanyMax Planck Society
110Glen P. Peters23,901105NorwayCICERO Center for International Climate Research
111Paul Berrisford23,89126UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
112Compton J. Tucker23,878119USGoddard Space Flight Center
113Robert Costanza23,788116UKAustralian National University
114Fortunat Joos23,647105SwitzerlandUniversity of Bern
115Thomas R. Karl23,54592USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
116David Rind23,29294USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
117Ants Leetmaa23,27939USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
118Clara Deser23,269105USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
119Glenn H. White23,23115USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
120William H. Schlesinger23,121106USDuke University
121Victor Brovkin23,041100GermanyMax Planck Society
122Chris Jones22,992103UKMet Office
123Camille Parmesan22,95747UKThe University of Texas at Austin
124Francis W. Zwiers22,94786CanadaUniversity of Victoria
125Jonathan M. Gregory22,935107UKMet Office
126Jae Edmonds22,85777USUnited States Department of Energy
127James W. Hurrell22,72158USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
128J. F. B. Mitchell22,68969UKMet Office
129J. L. Jiménez22,632171USUniversity of Colorado Boulder
130Nicolas Viovy22,62583FranceCommissariat à l'Énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives
131Miguel B. Araújo22,596106PortugalConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
132Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté22,579161NetherlandsDutch Research Council
133Björn Stevens22,560108GermanyMax Planck Society
134Gabriel A. Vecchi22,420102USPrinceton University
135Steven J. Smith22,40377USUnited States Department of Energy
136Hans Hersbach22,33928UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
137Michael J. McPhaden22,258112USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
138Nick A Rayner22,18443UKMet Office
139Mark Iredell22,14219USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
140Corinne Le Quéré22,096105UKUniversity of East Anglia
141Zhisheng An22,063113ChinaChinese Academy of Sciences
142Myles Allen22,05595UKUniversity of Oxford
143P. Kållberg22,04726SwedenEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
144Carole Peubey22,03811UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
145Thomas F. Stocker22,03395SwitzerlandUniversity of Bern
146Sandy P. Harrison22,031115SwedenUniversity of Reading
147Robert J. Nicholls21,949104UKUniversity of Southampton
148S. B. Healy21,94037UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
149Benjamin Poulter21,832115USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
150Christian Körner21,821135SwitzerlandUniversity of Basel
151Éric F. Lambin21,810109BelgiumUCLouvain
152Stefan Rahmstorf21,71979GermanyLeibniz Association
153Almut Arneth21,709119GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
154A. David McGuire21,60079USUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks
155Bette L. Otto‐Bliesner21,571102USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
156Michael Mann21,551113USPennsylvania State University
157Daniel Kahneman21,508160USPrinceton University
158Richard Betts21,46382UKMet Office
159David B. Lobell21,460113USStanford University
160E. Roeckner21,44182GermanyMax Planck Society
160R. Lawrence Edwards21,441107USUniversity of Minnesota
162Daniel Pauly21,437136CanadaUniversity of British Columbia
163A. Townsend Peterson21,360120USUniversity of Kansas
164Rossana Dragani21,29815UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
165Alan Geer21,21435UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
166Frédéric Vitart21,18064UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
167C. S. Holling21,17963UKUniversity of Florida
168Paul G. Falkowski21,167127USRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
169S. Uppala21,14621UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
170N. M. Mahowald21,090115USCornell University
171Riccardo Valentini21,05790ItalyUniversità degli Studi della Tuscia
172Elmar Kriegler20,97983GermanyLeibniz Association
173Thomas L. Delworth20,95387USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
174Lars Isaksen20,95136NorwayEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
175Raymond S. Bradley20,94685USUniversity of Massachusetts Amherst
176Mike Hulme20,93190UKUniversity of East Anglia
177Fikret Berkes20,930100CanadaUniversity of Manitoba
178T. M. L. Wigley20,90395AustraliaUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
179Joseph A. Berry20,872114USCarnegie Institution for Science
180Joseph M. Prospero20,777107USUniversity of Miami
181Rattan Lal20,745169USThe Ohio State University
182Mark A. Cane20,69197USColumbia University
183Eric A. Davidson20,673120USWoodwell Climate Research Center
184Stephen Polasky20,668120USUniversity of Minnesota
185Douglas R. Worsnop20,657169USAerodyne Research
186Richard S.J. Tol20,569104NetherlandsVrije Universiteit Amsterdam
187Marika M. Holland20,51874USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
188B. E. Law20,506115USOregon State University
189Ken Caldeira20,50181USCarnegie Institution for Science
190Thomas C. Peterson20,43349USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
191Toshio Yamagata20,37798JapanJapan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
192Inez Fung20,29089USUniversity of California, Berkeley
193Frédéric Chevallier20,277107FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
194Malte Meinshausen20,22370AustraliaThe University of Melbourne
195Gregory P. Asner20,194149USCarnegie Institution for Science
195Dominique Raynaud20,19472FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
197T. N. Palmer20,172105UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
198Joel Schwartz20,142183USHarvard University
199Gretchen C. Daily20,134113USStanford University
200Eric Rignot20,123104USCalifornia Institute of Technology
201A. P. McNally20,11929UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
202Xuebin Zhang20,08875CanadaGovernment of Canada
203K. C. Mo20,06017ChinaNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
204Edward R. Cook20,058101USColumbia University
205Cynthia Rosenzweig20,01392USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
206Pieter P. Tans20,012113USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
207Kevin J. Gaston19,954181UKUniversity of Sheffield
208Valérie Masson‐Delmotte19,95196FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
209Martin Heimann19,904107GermanyMax Planck Society
210Antoine Guisan19,855104SwitzerlandUniversity of Lausanne
211George J. Huffman19,81677USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
212Niels Bormann19,78131UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
213Jimy Dudhia19,75870USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
214Daniel R. Cayan19,68291USUniversity of California San Diego
215L. S. Gandin19,6119USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
216Oliver L. Phillips19,588126UKUniversity of Leeds
217Randal D. Koster19,58791USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
218Ulrike Lohmann19,578110SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
219Dennis G. Deaven19,55410USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
220Ulf Andrae19,50411SwedenSwedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute
221Leo van de Berg19,4869GermanyEuropean Space Operations Centre
222Larry W. Horowitz19,485106USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
223Yiqi Luo19,450144USUniversity of Oklahoma
224Sandrine Bony19,44879FranceSorbonne Université
225Mojib Latif19,40990GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
226C. Ropelewski19,4072US
227W. Ebisuzaki19,4062US
228Édouard Bard19,34795FranceCollège de France
229James C. Zachos19,247100USUniversity of California, Santa Cruz
229G. C. Hurtt19,24772USUniversity of Maryland, College Park
231Timo Vesala19,229108FinlandUniversity of Helsinki
232Hans‐Otto Pörtner19,228106GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
233Ivan A. Janssens19,219121BelgiumUniversity of Antwerp
234Rik Wanninkhof19,17789USUnited States Department of Commerce
235Susan Solomon19,161115USMassachusetts Institute of Technology
236Sönke Zaehle19,153107GermanyMax Planck Society
237Pamela A. Matson19,11792USStanford University
238Keith R. Briffa19,11191UKUniversity of East Anglia
239R. Reynolds19,0985USUniversity of Reading
240Sandra Lavorel19,079124FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
241J. Wang19,0624USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
242Yutong Zhu19,0496ChinaChina Academy of Railway Sciences
242Dennis Joseph19,0491US
244Richard B. Alley19,044110USPennsylvania State University
245William J. Parton18,963112USColorado State University
246D. Tanré18,95592FranceUniversité de Lille
247Zbigniew Klimont18,95289AustriaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
248Michael Schulz18,93297NorwayNorwegian Meteorological Institute
249Kristie L. Ebi18,895103USUniversity of Washington
250Chris D. Thomas18,891108UKUniversity of York
251Alex Guenther18,832124USU.S. National Science Foundation
252Timothy J. Osborn18,76678UKUniversity of East Anglia
253Frank J. Millero18,759111USUniversity of Miami
254Philip J. Rasch18,67790USUnited States Department of Energy
255Gabriele C. Hegerl18,67477UKUniversity of Edinburgh
256S. J. Ghan18,63893USUnited States Department of Energy
257Hubertus Fischer18,592105SwitzerlandUniversity of Bern
258Jos Lelieveld18,537133NetherlandsMax Planck Society
259Paulo Artaxo18,423125BrazilUniversidade de São Paulo
260Wolfgang Crämer18,40083GermanyLeibniz Association
261D. R. Blake18,373141USUniversity of California, Irvine
262W. R. Peltier18,371104CanadaUniversity of Toronto
263Georgina M. Mace18,217108UKUniversity of London
264Veronika Eyring18,21371GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
265Hugh P. Possingham18,099158AustraliaThe University of Queensland
266Benjamin S. Halpern18,087111USUniversity of California, Santa Barbara
267L. Ruby Leung17,997116USUnited States Department of Energy
268Peter A. Stott17,99681UKMet Office
269Will Steffen17,99179AustraliaAustralian National University
270Richard W. Reynolds17,97151IrelandNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
271Stephen P. Long17,962119USUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
272Jürg Luterbacher17,95296GermanyJustus-Liebig-Universität Gießen
273Thomas M. Smith17,92252USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
274Alan Robock17,907107USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
275John E. Kutzbach17,89076USUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison
276Piers Forster17,861102UKUniversity of Leeds
277Stefan Schouten17,823132NetherlandsDutch Research Council
278Fei‐Fei Jin17,81087USUniversity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
279Keith W. Oleson17,73067USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
280Hanqin Tian17,715120USAuburn University
281Syukuro Manabe17,57774USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
282Robert J. Scholes17,56497South AfricaUniversity of the Witwatersrand
283Amos Tversky17,466128USStanford University
284David M. Karl17,430128USUniversity of Hawaii System
285Walter C. Oechel17,42297USSan Diego State University
286Joeri Rogelj17,39893SwitzerlandInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
287Volker Krey17,38170AustriaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
288Justin Sheffield17,36698USPrinceton University
289J. William Munger17,36599USHarvard University
290Stefan Hagemann17,35870GermanyMax Planck Society
291Taro Takahashi17,35788USColumbia University
292Ramakrishna Nemani17,33086USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
292Max J. Suárez17,33071USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
294Pingping Xie17,25634USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
295Minze Stuiver17,14667USUniversity of Washington
296Mark C. Serreze17,13777USUniversity of Colorado Boulder
297Chris Huntingford17,12184UKUK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
298Nebojša Nakićenović17,02258AustriaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
299Christoph Schär16,96792SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
300Christian Bernhofer16,94678GermanyTechnische Universität Dresden
301Nigel W. Arnell16,88977UKUniversity of Reading
302Paul Slovic16,858142USDecision Research
303John D. Aber16,850102USUniversity of New Hampshire
304David A. Wardle16,800126SwedenSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences
305David G. Streets16,789121USUniversity of Chicago
306Brian J. Soden16,78570USUniversity of Miami
307Reto Rüedy16,75958USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
308C. A. Senior16,71056UKMet Office
309William F. Laurance16,686132AustraliaJames Cook University
310Robert A. Berner16,650115USYale University
311Allison M. Thomson16,63645USUnited States Department of Energy
312Mark New16,63462UKUniversity of Cape Town
313Roger A. Pielke (sr)16,60895USColorado State University
314David A. Randall16,60091USColorado State University
314F. I. Woodward16,60083UKUniversity of Sheffield
316H. J. B. Birks16,550111NorwayUniversity of Bergen
317Jonathan T. Overpeck16,51579USUniversity of Arizona
318Richard Seager16,49395USColumbia University
319Paul Poli16,41630UKMétéo-France
320Péter Bauer16,37752UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
321Robert W. Howarth16,36897USCornell University
322Osvaldo E. Sala16,357101USUniversidad de Buenos Aires
323James N. Galloway16,312105USUniversity of Virginia
324Tianjun Zhou16,305104ChinaChinese Academy of Sciences
325Nina Buchmann16,293116SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
326Claudia Tebaldi16,27558USUnited States Department of Energy
327Simon A. Levin16,270143USPrinceton University
328Richard G. Fairbanks16,26076USColumbia University
329Axel Timmermann16,22791South KoreaUniversity of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa
330Brian Huntley16,17687UKDurham University
331Edward A. G. Schuur16,16397USNorthern Arizona University
332Martin Köhler16,14447GermanyDeutscher Wetterdienst
333Robert E. Dickinson16,142107USGeorgia Institute of Technology
334J. T. Kiehl16,12869USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
335Gunnar Myhre16,06899NorwayCICERO Center for International Climate Research
336J. P. Steffensen16,05568DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen
337A. J. Dolman16,02896NetherlandsVrije Universiteit Amsterdam
338Gurvan Madec16,02685FranceSorbonne Université
339Phillip A. Arkin16,02446USUniversity of Maryland, College Park
340Paul Ginoux15,99875USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
341Matthew Collins15,958120UKUniversity of Reading
342Gene E. Likens15,956133USCary Institute of Ecosystem Studies
343Johannes Lehmann15,943123USCornell University
344V. E. Romanovsky15,90184USUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks
345L. A. Remer15,87899USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
345Jennifer A. Logan15,87888USHarvard University
347T. F. Eck15,86988USGoddard Space Flight Center
348Jon Lloyd15,83993AustraliaUniversity of Leeds
349Elke Stehfest15,82978NetherlandsNetherlands Environmental Assessment Agency
350William J. Bond15,826106South AfricaUniversity of Cape Town
351Christopher S. Bretherton15,81497USUniversity of Washington
352Keith Lindsay15,78762USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
353Hans Joachim Schellnhuber15,76381GermanyLeibniz Association
354James H. Brown15,754129USUniversity of Florida
355Robert L. Wilby15,75394UKLoughborough University
356David Schimel15,735104USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
357Timothy M. Lenton15,71299UKUniversity of Exeter
358J.‐J. Morcrette15,71116European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
359Keith Paustian15,650100USColorado State University
360Stephen A. Klein15,64485USUnited States Department of Energy
361James C. McWilliams15,599116USUniversity of California, Los Angeles
362Benjamin Smith15,58086SwedenLund University
363Daniel Rosenfeld15,54694IsraelHebrew University of Jerusalem
364Joyce E. Penner15,51195USUniversity of Michigan
365D. E. Parker15,50241UKMet Office
366Andrew A. Lacis15,48977USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
367Michael D. Dettinger15,48881USUnited States Department of the Interior
368Niklaus E. Zimmermann15,471105SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
369Peter Thornton15,42990USUnited States Department of Energy
370Patrick J. Bartlein15,39490USUniversity of Oregon
371Jason Lowe15,37582UKMet Office
372Ricardo M. Trigo15,32494PortugalUniversity of Lisbon
373Gavin A. Schmidt15,21981USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
374Gaius R. Shaver15,21788USMarine Biological Laboratory
375Paul A. Mayewski15,19287USUniversity of Maine System
376Michel Loreau15,166112FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
377A. Stohl15,155118AustriaNILU
378Urs Baltensperger15,147139SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
379Оleg Dubovik15,135100FranceUniversité de Lille
380Gökhan Danabasoglu15,08883USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
381Philip W. Boyd15,043102New ZealandUniversity of Tasmania
382Allen H. Goldstein15,024130USUniversity of California, Berkeley
383Wenju Cai15,02186AustraliaAustralian Government
384Ray F. Weiss15,01896USUniversity of California San Diego
385Christopher L. Sabine14,98970USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
386James R. Ehleringer14,947123USUniversity of Utah
387James W. C. White14,94183USUniversity of Colorado Boulder
388Dario Papale14,93981ItalyUniversità degli Studi della Tuscia
389Sergio M. Vicente‐Serrano14,92896SpainConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas
390Thomas Dietz14,92282USMichigan State University
391Mario Herrero14,889117AustraliaAustralian Government
392Beatriz M. Monge-Sanz14,86415UKUniversity of Leeds
393Craig D. Allen14,85071USUnited States Geological Survey
394T. R. Oke14,83667CanadaUniversity of British Columbia
395Peter Havlík14,83395AustriaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
396Marco Matricardi14,81927UKEuropean Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
397Reg Watson14,80385AustraliaUniversity of British Columbia
398Dorthe Dahl‐Jensen14,79869DenmarkUniversity of Copenhagen
399Dieter Gerten14,77783GermanyLeibniz Association
400William D. Nordhaus14,76396USYale University
401Toshihiko Takemura14,74990JapanKyushu University
402Thomas R. Knutson14,71873USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
403Rik Leemans14,71774NetherlandsWageningen University & Research
404John M. Pandolfi14,70969AustraliaThe University of Queensland
405Chris K. Folland14,66166UKMet Office
406Tom Kram14,62233NetherlandsNetherlands Environmental Assessment Agency
407John H. Lawton14,588117UKImperial College London
407David R. Easterling14,58864USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
409S Kobayashi14,57351JapanJuntendo University
409Nathan P. Gillett14,57381CanadaGovernment of Canada
411Katherine Calvin14,56772USUnited States Department of Energy
412Jochem Marotzke14,55284GermanyMax Planck Society
413Peter J. Mumby14,548111UKThe University of Queensland
414Christoph Müller14,51195GermanyLeibniz Association
415Keith Beven14,507115UKLancaster University
416Richard J. Norby14,48493USUnited States Department of Energy
417Christina Tavolato14,4785AustriaUniversity of Vienna
418David W. J. Thompson14,47059USColorado State University
419Peter J. Webster14,43371USGeorgia Institute of Technology
420Russell S. Vose14,43064USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
420Wolfgang Lucht14,43070GermanyLeibniz Association
420Graeme L. Stephens14,43096USColorado State University
423Erich Fischer14,42370SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
424A. J. Pitman14,38484AustraliaUNSW Sydney
425Dennis L. Hartmann14,38087USUniversity of Washington
426Andrew Gettelman14,36994USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
427G. J. Collatz14,32173USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
428Hans von Storch14,31473GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
429Byoung-Kwon Park14,3104South KoreaKorea Meteorological Administration
430Ulf Riebesell14,30197GermanyHelmholtz Association of German Research Centres
430Guy F. Midgley14,30176South AfricaSouth African National Biodiversity Institute
432L. Haimberger14,2944AustriaUniversity of Vienna
433Michael J. Prather14,27092USUniversity of California, Irvine
434Jeremy B. C. Jackson14,24769USSmithsonian Institution
435Nicolas Bellouin14,23975UKUniversity of Reading
436William G. Large14,23060USUniversity Corporation for Atmospheric Research
436Stefan Kinne14,23070GermanyMax Planck Society
438C. Delsol14,2261UKSwedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute
439David D. Breshears14,20877USUniversity of Arizona
440Michael Obersteiner14,174110UKInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
441Siegfried D. Schubert14,16963USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
442Andrew J. Weaver14,13075CanadaUniversity of Victoria
443Soroosh Sorooshian14,122102USUniversity of California, Irvine
444Pieter Meiert Grootes14,11783GermanyChristian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
444D. Koch14,11768USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
446J. Chappellaz14,10763FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
447Michelle L. Bell14,038120USYale University
448Spyros Ν. Pandis14,030109USUniversity of Patras
449Brian C. O’Neill14,01664USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
450Alberte Bondeau14,01260FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
451Michael Raupach13,98787AustraliaRWTH Aachen University
452Robert Vautard13,96380FranceCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
453Susan Trumbore13,947105USMax Planck Society
454Jean‐Pierre Gattuso13,88893BelgiumCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique
455Simon L. Lewis13,87999UKUniversity of Leeds
456Daniel C. Nepstad13,86879USWoodwell Climate Research Center
457P. G. Jarvis13,85485UKUniversity of Edinburgh
458Philip K. Thornton13,83796UKCGIAR
459Paul R. Ehrlich13,823116USStanford University
460Richard P. Allan13,76264UKUniversity of Reading
461David P. Rowell13,76148UKMet Office
462Julienne Strœve13,74268USUniversity of Colorado Boulder
463John P. Dunne13,70587USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
464Matthew C. Hansen13,69096USUniversity of Maryland, College Park
465Paul C. Stern13,68370UKNational Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
466Robert F. Adler13,67476USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
467Michael Fiorino13,64726USLawrence Livermore National Laboratory
468Andrew T. Wittenberg13,63071USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
469Bernd Kromer13,62067GermanyHeidelberg University
470Samuel Levis13,61863USNSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
471Tami C. Bond13,60563USUniversity of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
472Nils Chr. Stenseth13,597123NorwayUniversity of Oslo
473Keith P. Shine13,59682UKUniversity of Reading
474David J. Karoly13,57368AustraliaThe University of Melbourne
475Mian Chin13,56194USNational Aeronautics and Space Administration
476Annette Menzel13,55169GermanyTechnical University of Munich
477Sandra Dı́az13,530106UKUniversidad Nacional de Córdoba
478Jack Woollen13,52111USNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
479Robert M. May13,498157UKUniversity of Oxford
480David Pollard13,48589USPennsylvania State University
481R.S. de Groot13,47365Wageningen University & Research
482Johan Six13,457132SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
483Monica G. Turner13,452112USUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison
484David Frank13,44394USBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
485Martin Wild13,43284SwitzerlandBoard of the Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology
486Yoshihide Wada13,431116Saudi ArabiaInternational Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
487Gunnar Luderer13,41381GermanyLeibniz Association
488John E. Walsh13,31384USUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks
489Akio Kitoh13,31169JapanJapan Meteorological Agency
490Bart van den Hurk13,30478NetherlandsMinistry of Infrastructure and Water Management
491David B. Lindenmayer13,299143AustraliaAustralian National University
492Adam A. Scaife13,27789UKMet Office
493Jane Lubchenco13,27676USOregon State University
494Tandong Yao13,27499ChinaChinese Academy of Sciences
495Frank W. Geels13,27182UKUniversity of Manchester
496Kurt Lambeck13,26895AustraliaAustralian National University
497C. Arden Pope13,25585USBrigham Young University
498David Y. Hollinger13,24784USUnited States Department of Agriculture
499Jack J. Middelburg13,244116NetherlandsUtrecht University
500Éric Vermote13,24381USUniversity of Maryland, College Park

Method

To produce these rankings, Carbon Brief defined a metric called the “citation count”. This is the number of times that each academic study, book and report is referenced by the others within the database.

Carbon Brief identified and omitted the IPCC reports and chapters from the final ranking of citation count. This is because their citation count would be substantially higher than that over other publications and would have an outsize influence on the rankings. A key aim of Project Cosmos was to identify and analyse the foundational science that underpins climate knowledge, not the extent to which IPCC reports cite other IPCC reports.

A publication’s citation count only shows how highly cited it is within Project Cosmos. It does not indicate how highly cited the study is in broader academic literature.

Carbon Brief manually checked the Cosmos 500 authors to identify any instances when an expert is listed twice. In these very rare cases, Carbon Brief manually combined the profiles.

(For example, Anthony David McGuire is listed twice as “A. David McGuire” and “A. D. McGuire’”. This indicates that he has two separate profiles on OpenAlex – an open-source catalogue of millions of publications – and that studies he has written are split across these two profiles. Carbon Brief added together the citation counts for these two entries to ensure that McGuire is ranked correctly.)

See Carbon Brief’s methodology article for more details on how the database was constructed.

Each author’s gender and country of affiliation was also recorded. Country of affiliation is based on the author’s institutional affiliation, according to OpenAlex’s “current institutions” tab. Note that this data is recorded by OpenAlex and may contain errors.

Where no “current institutions” are listed on OpenAlex, or where multiple institutions are listed, Carbon Brief used internet searches to determine the expert’s most recent institution. Otherwise, the single institution listed for an author is based on OpenAlex’s highest count among their institution affiliations. Note that this can mean their current affiliation is not shown, but, rather, the institution shown is where they published the most studies.

The gender of authors is based on the usual gender of their first name, as determined by an internet search for their professional website bearing a sex-specific pronoun and ChatGPT.

Carbon Brief recognises that gender is not best categorised using a binary “male” or “female” label, and appreciates that the methods used of determining author gender could result in inaccuracies. However, for the purpose of this analysis, this method was deemed the most suitable.