The Department of Earth Sciences is looking for a highly motivated PhD candidate with an MSc background in Earth, Environmental or Climate Sciences or other appropriate fields. You will work on the project ‘Past, present and future global inland-water methane budget under the impact of compounded changes’.
Your jobInland waters function as active biogeochemical reactors for the production, consumption, transport and emissions of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. Methane is the second most important anthropogenic greenhouse gas contributing to global warming today. However, current estimates of methane emissions from inland waters to the atmosphere are highly uncertain because of limitations in long-term observational data and modelling methodology.
In this four-year study, you will develop a model for the dynamic methane cycling in global inland waters. This model will build on our pioneering model framework and simulate the changes in cycling fluxes of major carbon forms from land via inland waters to sea. You will synthesise, test, and use the reported methane kinetics from labs and culture experiments to construct the model using Python programming language. You will also compile field methane measurement data from published literature and datasets for analysis and model validation. On this basis, we will quantify the spatiotemporal changes in global inland-water methane dynamics from the pre-industrial era till the present and assess the influences of hydro-climate change and a variety of human activities (such as land-use change, eutrophication, and river damming). Moreover, the role of different waterbodies and the mutual interplay between inland-water methane dynamics and climate change will be the research focus. We invite you to share your ideas and suggestions for this innovative project in your motivation letter.
This project is part of the 10-year
EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO). At EMBRACER, we work at the very frontiers of knowledge on climate change, Earth’s climate system and climate feedbacks. The programme brings together a wide range of world-leading climate experts with the aim to address existing uncertainties about climate feedbacks at the boundaries between oceans, land, ice, and atmosphere. Our interdisciplinary approach and state-of-the-art infrastructure will bring us forward in our understanding of the impact of climate feedbacks emerging over the next decades to centuries.
A personalised training programme will be set up, reflecting your training needs and career objectives. About 20% of your time will be dedicated to this training component, which includes following courses/workshops as well as training on the job in assisting in the Bachelor’s and Master’s programmes of the department at Utrecht University.