Jan Rosenow
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Fellow, Energy Institute
Jan Rosenow | |
|---|---|
| Awards | Fellow, Royal Society of Arts Fellow, Energy Institute |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | University of Oxford London School of Economics University of Münster |
| Thesis | Politics of Change: Energy Efficiency Policy in Britain and Germany (2013) |
| Academic work | |
| Institutions | University of Oxford Environmental Change Institute Oriel College, Oxford Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership, University of Cambridge University of Sussex |
Main interests | Energy policy, energy efficiency, electrification, renewable energy, decarbonisation |
Jan Rosenow is a German academic who is Professor of Energy and Climate Policy at the University of Oxford. He leads the Energy Programme at the Environmental Change Institute and serves as a Jackson Senior Research Fellow at Oriel College, Oxford. He is also a Senior Associate at the Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership at the University of Cambridge and Affiliate Faculty at the University of Sussex.
Rosenow's research spans energy demand, energy efficiency, electrification and climate policy. He has published over 150 peer-reviewed articles and appears in Stanford University's database of the top 2% most cited scientists worldwide. He has advised organisations including the World Bank, the World Economic Forum and the International Energy Agency, and has provided expert testimony to both the UK Parliament and the European Parliament.
His work has been featured in The New York Times, The Economist and The Guardian.
Rosenow grew up in Lemgo, Germany where he founded a local environmental group at the age of eight.[1] He went on to study Geosciences at the University of Münster, graduating with a Diplom.[2] He then completed an MSc in Environmental Policy at the London School of Economics.[3][4]
In 2009, Rosenow began a doctorate in energy policy at the University of Oxford's School of Geography and the Environment, where he was a member of St Hilda's College. His thesis, Politics of Change: Energy Efficiency Policy in Britain and Germany, supervised by Nick Eyre and Miranda Schreurs, was submitted in 2013.[5][4] He completed executive training at the University of Cambridge and the Florence School of Regulation.[6]
Career
In June 2015, Rosenow joined the Centre on Innovation and Energy Demand and SPRU (Science and Technology Policy Research Unit) at the University of Sussex as a Senior Fellow, while also holding Honorary Research Associate positions at the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford and at the Freie Universität Berlin's Environmental Policy Research Centre.[7][8]
Rosenow also conducted research at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in the summer of 2012,[5] the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Environment and Energy and the Öko-Institut.[8] He taught in nature, society and environmental policy at the School of Geography and the Environment and in economics and policy of energy and the environment at University College London's Energy Institute.[8] His research focuses on energy demand, energy efficiency, electrification, renewable energy, and energy and climate policy.[6]
Rosenow served as vice president and European Programme Director at the Regulatory Assistance Project (RAP), a global non-profit organisation working on energy and climate policy, later continuing as a Senior Advisor to RAP through a collaboration with the Environmental Change Institute (ECI).[9]
In March 2025, Rosenow was appointed Energy Programme Lead at the ECI and Jackson Senior Research Fellow at Oriel College, Oxford, returning to the department where he completed his doctorate.[9][10] The position is supported by the Frank Jackson Foundation, a grant-giving trust funding research on energy systems, conservation and the environment.[11] He is also a Visitor at the ZERO Institute (Zero-carbon Energy Research Oxford) at the University of Oxford.[12] On 18 July 2025, he was conferred the title of Professor of Energy and Climate Policy by Oxford's Vice-chancellor, Irene Tracey.[1]
Advisory roles
Rosenow has advised international organisations on energy and climate policy, including the World Economic Forum, the United Nations, the World Bank and the International Energy Agency.[6] Through his work at RAP, he also advised the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the United States Agency for International Development, the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit, and the European Commission.[13][14]
Rosenow has served as a Special Advisor to the UK House of Commons Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy Committee, submitting written evidence on heat decarbonisation policy in July 2020,[15] giving oral evidence to the Public Accounts Committee on household energy efficiency measures in May 2016,[16] and advising the European Parliament and the European Commission on climate neutrality policy.[6][17] In May 2025, giving evidence to the Scottish Parliament's Net Zero, Energy and Transport Committee on hydrogen policy, Rosenow argued that Scotland's wind resources gave it a strategic advantage for green hydrogen production.[18]
In October 2025, at the invitation of the Danish EU Presidency, Rosenow addressed the Energy Council in Luxembourg, briefing the 27 EU energy ministers on Europe's industrial electrification strategy.[19] Rosenow concluded that "by putting the right policy framework in place, we will not just decarbonise our industry; we will build a 21st‑century industrial powerhouse that is modern, competitive, and secure."[20]
In January 2026, Rosenow participated in the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland, facilitating discussions on the future of global electricity systems and moderating sessions on clean energy competitiveness and the ASEAN Power Grid.[21]
Recognition
In November 2025, Rosenow was recognised in Stanford University's database of the top 2% most cited scientists worldwide.[22] He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts and holds a fellowship at the Energy Institute.[9]