Janet Ranganathan

Janet Ranganathan
Vice President for Science and Research

Janet Ranganathan is the Vice President for Science and Research at the World Resources Institute. She plays a lead role in ensuring that WRI’s research is robust and its strategies evidence based and designed to create scalable results. This includes overseeing the planning, quality control, and evaluation of WRI’s research and publications.

She works closely with the Managing Director to oversee the development of strategy within and across WRI’s four programs: Climate, Energy and Transport; Institutions and Governance; People and Ecosystems; and Markets and Enterprises. Janet is also a member of the World Resources Report project team focusing on Food Futures: Feeding 9 Billion while Sustaining Ecosystems in a Changing Climate.

Janet has developed and rolled out numerous initiatives to address the root causes of poverty and environmental degradation. Before becoming Vice President, Janet founded and directed WRI’s People and Ecosystems Program to reverse ecosystem degradation and ensure ecosystems’ capacity to meet human needs. Within the People and Ecosystems Program, she launched two major initiatives on Ecosystem Services and Forest Landscapes.

Janet has also served in WRI’s Market and Enterprise and Climate and Energy programs. She developed and directed WRI’s US Climate Policy Initiative, which advanced policies and business actions that resulted in significant greenhouse gas emissions reductions. She founded and directed the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative, an international multi-stakeholder partnership convened by WRI and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development for the purpose of developing international greenhouse gas accounting and reporting standards. The Greenhouse Gas Protocol is now the international accounting and reporting standard for business and numerous national and state greenhouse gas programs.

Janet serves on the board of Ceres, the International Integrated Reporting Council and the Mars Science Advisory Committee. She is also a member of the International Programme Advisory Committee for the Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation Programme supported by the UK Department for International Development (DFID). She has advised numerous companies on sustainability strategies.

Janet has written extensively on a broad range of sustainable development challenges, including business and markets, environmental performance measurement, environmental accounting, climate change, greenhouse gas measurement and reporting, ecosystem degradation, food security, forests and global environmental governance.

Publications

Publications published by WRI are listed here and in the sidebar to the right.

Prior to joining WRI Janet worked on business and environmental issues in the U.K. both as a Senior Lecturer at the University of Hertfordshire and in a regulatory capacity with the Department of Environment and Hertfordshire Waste Regulatory Authority.

Janet Ranganathan received a BSc. (Hons) from Imperial College of Science, Technology & Medicine, London in 1983, and a MSc. with distinction in Environmental Technology from Imperial College in 1990.

Janet was born and raised in Cornwall, England. She is married to Kumar and has two daughters Angela and Serena.

Read More »

Latest Post

Submitted on April 16, 2013
This post originally appeared on The Guardian’s Sustainable Business blog. The way companies report on their financial status has changed little since corporate accounting standards were first created 80 years ago. Yet the world they operate in, and the risks and opportunities they face, have changed almost beyond recognition. Global population has soared from two to seven billion, with...

More Blog Posts

Submitted on January 11, 2013
This piece originally appeared on The Guardian’s Sustainable Business website. As another year begins, big business will continue falling well short of taking the leadership role on the...
Submitted on May 25, 2012
As government leaders prepare for next month’s UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) in Brazil, one issue is conspicuously absent from the agenda: land rights. Strong property rights—the...
Submitted on April 27, 2012
Let me ‘fess up. The state of the environment sometimes gets me down. But to be fair, Earth’s vital signs would drive any respectable emergency room doctor into a state of utter panic. Globally, two...
Submitted on March 19, 2012
A version of this blog ran on The Guardian Sustainable Business. It is based on Janet Ranganathan’s presentation at a recent event on integrated reporting in New York, hosted by WRI’s Corporate...
Submitted on December 20, 2011
Shale gas is a game-changer for global energy supply. It is already transforming the U.S. energy outlook, and is expected to deliver over 40% of domestic gas production by 2025 (Figure 1). Other...
Submitted on October 4, 2011
Today the GHG Protocol launches two new global greenhouse gas accounting standards - for corporate value chains (scope 3) and product life cycle emissions. Janet Ranganathan, WRI’s Vice-...
Submitted on September 23, 2011
This piece originally appeared in The Solutions Journal Can the current food production system feed a growing population in a changing climate while sustaining ecosystems? The answer is an emphatic...
Submitted on August 23, 2011
This story originally appeared in the Guardian. Over the past 150 years, industrialization has taken its toll. All-too-often, forests have been sacrificed in the face of expanding business and...
Submitted on August 9, 2011
This piece was originally posted on www.environmentalleader.com, and was written by Amanda DeSantis, DuPont, and Janet Ranganathan, WRI. This is the second in a two-part series. Read part I here....
Submitted on July 26, 2011
This piece was originally posted on www.environmentalleader.com, and was written by Amanda DeSantis, DuPont, and Janet Ranganathan, WRI. Read part II here. For many of us, the term “ecosystems”...
Submitted on July 13, 2011
This piece originally appeared on Bloomberg Government and is reposted with permission. Extreme weather events and climate- related disruptions are occurring with alarming frequency and intensity,...
Submitted on July 11, 2011
This piece was originally posted on the Ecosystem Services for Policy Alleviation website, and was written with WRI intern Julie Edmonds. In these times of budget constraints, municipal authorities...
Submitted on June 21, 2011
In a survey of global businesses, 86 percent described responding to climate risks or investing in adaptation as a business opportunity. So finds a new report jointly released yesterday by the UN...
Submitted on February 10, 2011
Do the revised reporting guidelines for the oil and gas industry go far enough? Last month IPIECA, the global oil and gas industry association for environmental and social issues, along with the...