Kathryn Brown awarded OBE for services to climate change research

Kathryn Brown awarded OBE for services to climate change research

The Wildlife Trusts’ acting director for climate action, Kathryn Brown, has been awarded an OBE in the New Year Honours List for services to climate change research.

Kathryn, lately head of climate adaptation at the Climate Change Committee (CCC), receives the honour for her unique and extensive contribution to the UK's evidence base and understanding of climate risk. Her work has been instrumental in driving forward greater recognition across Government and key sectors on the need to adapt to climate change, alongside reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 

Working within climate change policy and evidence for almost 20 years, Kathryn's standout achievement was her leadership of the Independent Assessment of Climate Risk to inform the government's third Climate Change Risk Assessment. This was a major undertaking, with Kathryn directing over 500 external experts over four years to produce thousands of pages of analysis. It will be a foundation stone of all that the UK Government and devolved administrations will do to adapt to climate change in the coming years. 

In previous years, she also acted as head of carbon budgets and technical lead on adaptation evidence in Defra, as well as working as lead negotiator for the European Union under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. 

Kathryn Brown says: 

“I was very surprised and thrilled to be awarded an OBE, and I’m delighted that our work at the Climate Change Committee on climate risk and adaptation has been recognised in this way. The need to plan for unprecedented changes in our climate has not had the political attention it should have over the past ten years, but awareness and action are now rising up the agenda in the UK.  

“This has been thanks to the work of hundreds of dedicated people – in academia, industry, NGOs and Government – who have spent years improving the evidence base, making the case for better policy and showing how it can be done on the ground. I feel very privileged to have had the opportunity to work alongside them and bring their expertise and deep knowledge into the Adaptation Committee's Independent Assessment of Climate Risk. I'm very proud of all we have achieved together." 

As director for climate action for The Wildlife Trusts, Kathryn is supporting the 46 individual Wildlife Trusts to implement both emissions reduction strategies and adaptation plans, as well as representing the federation in calling for much stronger ambition and policy and action on addressing the climate and nature crises jointly.  

Kathryn says: 

“Progress is still far too slow on ensuring that vital natural carbon stores are protected and that habitats and species can adapt to the inevitable climate change that is already happening. The Wildlife Trusts have called strongly for much greater action across a range of key Government announcements in recent months. The UK signalled its intent to step up as a climate leader at COP26, yet it went on to publish weak strategies on agricultural payments and peatland protection straight afterwards. 

“We need to keep making the case for greater action while showing how it can be done on the ground through the brilliant work of the Trusts, who collectively are one of the UK’s top ten land holders.”    

Editor’s notes

About Kathryn Brown

  • Between 2017 and 2021, Kathryn was the Head of Adaptation at the Climate Change Committee (CCC) and led the secretariat that supports the Adaptation Committee. She also holds a position as Visiting Senior Fellow at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at LSE and is an affiliated researcher at the Stockholm Environment Institute. 

  • Kathryn worked at the CCC on climate change adaptation for ten years, including a number of years as a senior analyst, during which she led the production of a number of statutory progress reports and advisory reports, including the Committee’s analysis on water, health, biodiversity, emergency planning, agriculture and forestry. The CCC plays an important role in holding government to account and is the Government’s independent adviser on progress towards adapting to climate change.  

  • Kathryn’s directed the Independent Assessment of Climate Risk, to inform the government’s third Climate Change Risk Assessment, between 2018 and 2021. This was a major undertaking, involving over 500 external experts over several years to produce over 2000 pages of evidence which addresses over 60 climate risks and opportunities across various sectors. The assessment has surpassed government requests, providing important advice on priorities for action in the next two years and making a crucial contribution to supporting policy making. The assessment will be a foundation stone of all that Government will do to adapt to climate change in coming years, particularly in developing its next round of National Adaptation Programmes (separately for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland).  

  • Building on these achievements, Kathryn is supporting The Wildlife Trusts for six months on secondment from the CCC – as TWT’s Director for Climate Action. She provides expert advice, helping the 46 individual Wildlife Trusts to improve their resilience to climate change, develop |emission reduction strategies, and will help facilitate greater action and understanding on nature restoration, biodiversity loss and the role of nature-based solutions in addressing climate change.  

  • Prior to moving to the CCC, she spent nearly 10 years at Defra where she was head of carbon budgets, technical lead on adaptation evidence, and was a lead negotiator for the European Union under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in 2005. Kathryn also held a research fellowship at the Grantham Institute at Imperial College London in 2017-18. 

About The Wildlife Trusts and climate change

The Wildlife Trusts are taking bold action to address climate change. We aim to: 

  • Ensure that nature is playing a central and valued role in helping to address climate change; both through nature-based solutions to remove carbon from the atmosphere (mitigation), and to help us be more resilient to extreme weather hazards like flooding and extreme heat (adaptation) 

  • Be at the forefront of work to ensure that nature is in recovery, even as the climate changes which will place huge additional pressure on our already degraded landscapes.  This means doing as much as we can to make our reserves more resilient to extreme weather, and to work with others to think about our long-term conservation goals in a changing climate 

  • Encourage people to take action to both help nature and tackle climate change – see wildlifetrusts.org/things-you-can-do-climate-change