Taryn Fransen

Taryn Fransen
Project Director, Open Climate Network
tfransen@wri.org|+1 (202) 729-7790

Taryn Fransen leads the Open Climate Network, an independent climate policy-tracking coalition for which WRI serves as the secretariat. The Open Climate Network convenes independent policy institutes from over a dozen key countries to track national progress on climate change through robust, consistent, and transparent assessments.

Previously at WRI, Taryn managed the Greenhouse Gas Protocol Initiative’s efforts to build greenhouse gas accounting capacity in developing countries. In this role, Taryn led the technical design of the Mexico GHG Program, the first developing country greenhouse gas registry, and contributed to the development of similar programs in Brazil, China, India, and the Philippines. She co-authored the Basics of GHG Accounting curriculum for the GHG Management Institute, where she has served on the faculty. Taryn has also contributed to WRI’s research on measurement, reporting, and verification (MRV) under the international climate policy regime and led two strategic planning initiatives for the Institute: one on supporting emerging economies in the transition to low-carbon development, and the other on enhancing WRI’s engagement in Brazil.

Before joining WRI, Taryn was an Associate Program Officer at the United Nations Foundation, where she helped manage a grant portfolio addressing energy, development, and climate change. She previously worked for the Pew Center on Global Climate Change (now C2ES), where she coordinated research on the corporate response to climate change and developed a database of US state-level climate policies. Taryn has also provided research support to a range of clients in the environmental community, including the World Wildlife Fund, the Tropical Science Center, and the Stockholm Environment Institute. She holds an M.S. and B.S. in Earth Systems from Stanford University, speaks Portuguese and Spanish, and is based in San Francisco, California.

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Latest Post

In Open Climate Network | Submitted on June 11, 2013
Sven Harmeling, Takeshi Kuramochi, and Steffen Kalbekken also contributed to this post. How are we going to deliver climate finance at a sufficient scale to help developing countries mitigate and adapt to climate change? Parties to the UNFCCC–including those at this month’s intersessional in Bonn–are struggling to agree on the answer to this question. The UNFCCC established a...

More Blog Posts

Submitted on April 25, 2013
This post was co-authored with Jenna Blumenthal, an intern with WRI’s Climate and Energy program. As U.S. government officials take stock of last week’s Ministerial Meeting on Mobilizing...
In Open Climate Network | Submitted on December 6, 2012
In the UNFCCC international climate negotiations, “ambition” refers to countries’ collective will to cut greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions enough to keep global average temperature increase below 2°C....
In Open Climate Network | Submitted on December 4, 2012
This piece was co-authored with Smita Nakhooda of the Overseas Development Institute, with inputs from Noriko Shimizu (IGES) and Sven Harmeling (Germanwatch). Developed countries self-report that...
In Open Climate Network | Submitted on May 17, 2012
How much fast-start climate finance is actually flowing, and where is it being spent?1 This question has come up repeatedly alongside the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC...
In Open Climate Network | Submitted on September 9, 2011
Welcome to the Open Climate Network website, a platform for updates and analysis on country actions on climate mitigation and the provision of climate finance. Here you will find information on the...