Dr. Md. Liakath Ali

Principal Investigator of JO-CREWSnet in BRAC

Dr. Md. Liakath Ali is the director of the Climate Change Programme, Urban Development Programme, and Disaster Risk Management Programme at BRAC. Dr. Ali has 37 years of experience with various government, non-government, donor, and UN agencies. He worked for Bangladesh Water Development Board, Dhaka Water Supply and Sewerage Authority, UNDP, DFID and Water Aid Bangladesh. Dr. Ali is experienced in integrated water resources management, transboundary water basin management, climate change adaptation, resilience building, disaster risk reduction, urban development, and coastal planning and implementation. His essential qualifications include policy formulation, strategy development and evaluation, and knowledge management. Academically he is an engineer; BSc in Civil Engineering from BUET and Technology, MSc in Hydraulic Engineering from IHE, Delft, The Netherlands, and Ph.D. from the Wageningen University and IHE.

Learn more about Dr. Md. Liakath Ali’s work at BRAC Bangladesh Climate Change Programme

Mr. Abu Sadat Moniruzzaman Khan

As Head of the Climate Change Programme, Mr. Abu Sadat Moniruzzaman Khan is currently in charge of BRAC’s Climate Change Programme (CCP) portfolio of BRAC Bangladesh. He is leading locally-led adaptation initiatives, strategic planning, and partnerships in climate change development nationally and globally. He has over 26 years of experience in project and programme leadership, with expertise in climate adaptation, natural resource management, and livelihood development. Mr. Khan spearheaded the GCF-funded project enhancing adaptive capacities of coastal communities and designed BRAC’s Strategic Partnership Arrangement climate change indicator to integrate climate services into seven development programmes. Mr. Khan combines academic knowledge, action research, and extensive field implementation expertise.

Tapas Ranjan Chakraborty

Deputy Principal Investigator of JO-CREWSnet in BRAC

Tapas Ranjan Chakraborty has been working in the field of climate change and natural resource management and for last 24 years, focusing on Climate Change and Natural Resource Management. He is a Senior Programme Manager of Climate Change Programme of BRAC. He worked with lead environmental organizations and think tanks like, Oxfam, Sustainable Development Resource Center, Bangladesh POUSH, Center for Natural Resource Management, Bangladesh Center for Advanced Studies, etc. He obtained BSc (Honors) and MSc in Zoology.  He has experience of community mobilization, wetland management, and environmental education, etc. He worked with different networks and groups of Climate action and environmental betterment. Tapas has developed many awareness materials on climate change. Bridging the gap between science and policy is his passion.

Lead project: Climate Change Program and Strengthening Future Resilience

Publications

Sergey Paltsev

Dr. Sergey Paltsev is a Deputy Director of the MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy and a Senior Research Scientist at the MIT Energy Initiative, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, USA. His research covers a wide range of topics including energy economics, climate policy and impacts, taxation, advanced energy technologies, and international trade. He is the lead modeler in charge of the MIT Economic Projection and Policy Analysis (EPPA) model of the world and regional economies. Sergey is an Advisory Board Member for the Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) Consortium and a Member of the Scientific Steering Committee for the Integrated Assessment Modeling Consortium (IAMC). Dr. Paltsev is an author of more than 120 peer-reviewed publications in scientific journals and books.

Dr. Paltsev is a team leader for the JO-CREWSNET workstream on socioeconomic assessment of climate change impacts in Bangladesh. The overall objective of this workstream is to enhance strategic planning to increase climate resiliency of Bangladesh. Using information on biophysical impacts from the other workstreams of the JO-CREWSNET project, the integrated environmental-socioeconomic framework will enable an assessment of economic impacts of various climate-related changes and types of responsive actions under a wide range of scenarios.

Lead project: Jameel Observatory CREWSnet and the NAP, and Socioeconomic Assessment of Climate Change Impacts on Bangladesh

Learn more about Dr. Paltsev’s work at MIT Center for Sustainability and Science Strategy.

Sai Czander Ravela

Dr. Sai Ravela directs MIT’s Earth Signals and Systems Group (ESSG) and is a Principal Research Scientist in Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences. He develops cyclone & flood hazard models and generative AI tools for assessing risks and optimizing interventions in various sectors, including agriculture and energy. His work spans autonomous observatories (caos.mit.edu), seismic monitoring, exoplanet detection, fluid imaging (flux.mit.edu), and conservation biometrics (sloop.mit.edu). Dr. Ravela also introduced co-active systems theory for dynamic optimization (dols.mit.edu) and has advanced geometry-driven modeling for complex stochastic processes (stics.mit.edu). He co-founded Windrisktech LLC, which quantifies cyclone risk. Sai has over 100 publications and received MIT’s Infinite Kilometer Award in 2016 for exceptional research and mentorship. Outside of research, he enjoys hiking, gardening, ballroom dancing, and flying airplanes.

The ESSG specializes in methods and assessments of compound cyclone-induced wind, rain, flood, and cascading risk from extreme and seasonal extremes and is an integrated resource for coastal fluvial and pluvial flood modeling. ESSG operates the most extensive community-driven informative salinity observatory and advances climate resilience planning in southwest Bangladesh through a network of community members, scientific experts, and governmental and non-governmental resources.

Lead project: Forecasting Tropical Cyclone Induced Wind, Rain, and Flood Risk

Learn more about Sai’s work at Tropical Cyclone Induced Climate Risk and Adaptation in Bangladesh

C. Adam Schlosser

Dr. C. Adam Schlosser is currently a Senior Research Scientist and the Deputy Director at the MIT Center for Sustainability Science and Strategy. His primary interests are the modeling, prediction, and risk assessment of the natural, managed, and built water-energy-land systems. Dr. Schlosser has also undertaken studies of hydrology, weather, and climate and their predictability and limits-to-prediction. In doing so, he has worked with a wide range of numerical models, ranging from process-level to global-scale models, as well as observational data for evaluation and complementary analyses. He also has participated in and led international experiments aimed to assess the performance of Earth-system model components and predictions. Other collaborative research activities include extreme events; water-resource risk assessments to inform mitigation and adaptation strategies; biodiversity; global soil sinks of hydrogen, and renewable-energy resource and intermittency assessments.

Lead project: Land Management and Land Productivity

Michael S. Steckler

Michael S. Steckler received a B.S. degree in Earth and Planetary Sciences from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA, in 1976, and a Ph.D. degree in Marine Geophysics from Columbia University, New York, NY, USA, in 1981. He is currently a Lamont Research Professor with the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA. He is a geophysicist who works mainly on sedimentary systems with projects related both to tectonics and earthquakes, and to sea level and stratigraphy. A major research interest is vertical motions of the Earth’s surface and their preservation in the sedimentary record. His primary field area is Bangladesh and the surrounding countries.

Steckler has extensive experience from over 20 years of working in Bangladesh, including the climate vulnerable areas in SW Bangladesh. He is using his long experience in Bangladesh to provide geologic and geophysical context for the JO-CREWSnet initiative.  He is providing geophysical data sets on elevation and elevation change, land subsidence and sedimentation in Bangladesh, which are of importance for future projections for flooding and salinity intrusion. He is working with the Water Security group providing new data on the availability of deep fresh groundwater.  He is also contributing to the development of “Adaptation Fortresses”.

Lead project: Subsidence and Elevation Changes in Coastal Bangladesh

Learn more about Michael’s work on Geohazards in Bangladesh and Research Gate.

Publications