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Kiel Institute Researcher

Dr. Christine Merk

Kiel Institute Researcher

Dr. Christine Merk

Research Center

Christine Merk has been the Deputy Director of the Research Center Global Commons and Climate Policy at the Kiel Institute since 2020. Her main research interest are individuals’ trade-offs between reducing emissions, carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and stratospheric aerosol injection. She conducts focus groups, deliberations, field experiments and survey experiments to study public perceptions of marine CDR, like ocean alkalinization or seagrass restoration, Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), and stratospheric aerosol injection.

She leads the work on public perceptions of marine CDR in the consortia OceanNETs (H2020) and SeaO2-CDR (Horizon Europe). Furthermore, she contributes to the Horizon Europe Consortium Uptake and the interdisciplinary assessment of marine CDR in the research mission CDRMare. She is member of Working Group 41 on Ocean Interventions for Climate Change Mitigation of the Joint Group of Experts on the Scientific Aspects of Marine Environmental Protection (GESAMP).

Christine’s other research interest are ways to promote more sustainable diets. She researches the effects of interventions to promote climate-friendly meal choices in field experiments.

Christine has a background in policy analysis and administration science from the University of Konstanz and Rutgers University. She earned her Doctorate in Quantitative Economics from Kiel University in 2016.

Topics

Sustainable DevelopmentClimateBehavioral Economics

Main research interests

  • Perceptions of Solar Radiation Management
  • Societal perceptions of CCS and Carbon Dioxide Removal
  • Nudging Sustainable Consumption

Contact

+49 (431) 8814-614

Christine Merk has been the Deputy Director of the Research Center Global Commons and Climate Policy at the Kiel Institute since 2020. Her main research interest are individuals’ trade-offs between reducing emissions, carbon dioxide removal (CDR) and stratospheric aerosol injection. She conducts focus groups, deliberations, field experiments and survey experiments to study public perceptions of marine CDR, like ocean alkalinization or seagrass restoration, Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), and stratospheric aerosol injection.

She leads the work on public perceptions of marine CDR in the consortia OceanNETs (H2020) and SeaO2-CDR (Horizon Europe). Furthermore, she contributes to the Horizon Europe Consortium Uptake and the interdisciplinary assessment of marine CDR in the research mission CDRMare. She is member of Working Group 41 on Ocean Interventions for Climate Change Mitigation of the Joint Group of Experts on the Scientific Aspects of Marine Environmental Protection (GESAMP).

Christine’s other research interest are ways to promote more sustainable diets. She researches the effects of interventions to promote climate-friendly meal choices in field experiments.

Christine has a background in policy analysis and administration science from the University of Konstanz and Rutgers University. She earned her Doctorate in Quantitative Economics from Kiel University in 2016.

  • Does the nationality of CO2 matter? Public perceptions of a Northern European market for CO2 storage (CCSMARKET)

  • Co-CREATE

  • SeaO2-CDR

  • News

    06.06.2023

    Seagras

    New EU project launched to evaluate mechanisms for using the ocean to remove atmospheric CO2

  • News

    17.06.2020

    Close-up of the ocean at sunset

    Mobilizing the ocean for climate protection

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Research Center & Groups

  • Research Area: Global Commons and Climate Policy

    Global Commons and Climate Policy

  • Global Transformation