Philip Minderhoud

Philip Minderhoud

researcher Netherlands

Philip Minderhoud is a researcher from Wageningen University in the Netherlands, recognized for his contributions to understanding the impacts of sea level rise. He co-authored a pivotal study in Nature that found many scientific evaluations have inaccurately measured sea levels, potentially endangering millions of people living in coastal areas.

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
0 wks
Reach
96,425
Power
3,064$
Sentiment
7.20
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
Jamaica 1 8.00 0.32% +0% 2,961,167 9,401 $15,000 48$
Panama 1 8.00 0.17% +0% 4,314,768 7,491 $76,000 132$
United Kingdom 1 7.00 0.09% +0% 67,886,011 62,338 $2,700,000 2,479$
Portugal 1 8.00 0.17% +0% 10,196,709 17,195 $240,000 405$
Totals 4 85,358,655 96,425 $3,031,000 3,064$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

Jamaica Jamaica: Philip Minderhoud is the senior author of the research and an associate professor at Wageningen University & Research. 8

The Gleaner – major Jamaican newspaper, est. 1834: Editorial | Take heed to rising sea levels | Commentary

Panama Panama: Philip Minderhoud summarized the findings of the study, emphasizing the discrepancies in sea level predictions. 8

La Prensa – leading Panamanian daily, est. 1980: El nivel del mar ha subido mucho más de lo estimado por los modelos científicos

United Kingdom United Kingdom: Dr Philip Minderhoud of Wageningen University in the Netherlands discovered that more than 90% of these studies did not use local, direct measurements of sea levels. 7

The Guardian: Global sea levels have been underestimated due to poor modelling, research suggests | Oceans

Portugal Portugal: Philip Minderhoud warns of an interdisciplinary blind spot between sea level science and coastal impact science. 8

Público: A subida do nível do mar pode ser, afinal, entre 30cm e um metro mais elevada | Subida do mar