A comprehensive directory of the world's leading climate scientists whose research underpins
Saferland's climate risk methodology. This directory documents 46 scientists across 10 categories,
rated by academic credibility and public visibility. Their collective work — spanning sea level rise,
extreme weather attribution, ice sheet dynamics, AMOC stability, and Danish regional climate projections —
forms the scientific foundation for property-level risk assessment in Denmark.
46
Scientists
28
IPCC Authors
10
Nordic Researchers
4
TIME 100 Listed
8.1
Avg. Credibility
6.2
Avg. Visibility
👤All Experts
46 scientists across 10 categories
🔍
Scientist
Category
Field
Cred. / Vis.
Links
Works
★Scoring Methodology
How credibility and visibility are assessed
Each scientist is rated on two independent scales. Credibility measures academic standing,
peer-reviewed impact, and institutional authority. Visibility measures public recognition
and influence outside academia. High credibility with low visibility is common among technical specialists;
high visibility with low credibility warrants caution.
Credibility Score (1–10)
Score
Criteria
9–10
h-index >100 or Nobel/equivalent prize; IPCC CLA/Chair roles; field-defining discoveries; predictions validated over decades
7–8
h-index 50–100; IPCC Lead Author; highly cited researcher (top 1%); major institutional leadership
5–6
h-index 30–50; IPCC contributing author or national advisory roles; respected within specialty
3–4
Active researcher; publications in peer-reviewed journals; limited cross-field recognition
Public Visibility Score (1–10)
Score
Criteria
9–10
TIME 100; regular mainstream media presence; bestselling books; >500K social media following
7–8
TED talks with millions of views; frequent media commentary; popular books; recognized name outside academia
5–6
Known in policy circles; occasional media appearances; active science communication
3–4
Known within academic community; occasional interviews; limited public profile
🏠Saferland Relevance
Scientists whose work most directly informs property risk assessment
The following researchers' work most directly informs Saferland's methodology and feature development.
Their findings shape our scoring algorithms, scenario projections, and risk factor definitions.
Scientist
Institution
Saferland Relevance
Kirsten Halsnæs
DTU
Flood damage cost modeling for Denmark. Source for economic panel projections.
Martin Stendel
DMI
Danish sea level projections used in scenario panel. Danish Climate Atlas.
Stefan Rahmstorf
PIK Potsdam
AMOC collapse SLR implications for Northern Europe (+1m geostrophic effect).
Ditlevsen & Ditlevsen (2023) — Warning of a forthcoming collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation. Nature Communications. doi:10.1038/s41467-023-39810-w
Hansen et al. (2025) — Global warming acceleration. NASA GISS
Schmidt & Hausfather (2025) — Temperature anomalies. NASA GISS
DeConto & Pollard (2016) — Contribution of Antarctica to past and future sea-level rise. Nature. doi:10.1038/nature17145