Jennifer Molnar
The Nature Conservancy
As Managing Director, Policy & Markets Analytics, for The Nature Conservancy, Jennifer Molnar provides thought leadership on improving society’s ability to create a more sustainable future for nature and people, including through corporate practices and policy. Molnar has 15 years of experience bringing science to decisions that improve the state of the natural world and how people depend on it, including through research, global assessments, corporate practice innovations, and environmental remediation. She is the science lead for the TNC-Dow collaboration to incorporate nature and the value it provides to people into corporate decision-making. This work has led to Dow’s ground-breaking ten-year Valuing Nature Goal – a commitment to consider nature in all of the Fortune 50 company’s capital, R&D, and real estate decisions by 2020, while aiming to generate $1B in business value from projects that are good for business and good for ecosystems. Until recently, Molnar was the director of science for The Nature Conservancy, where she was responsible for helping the Conservancy bring the best possible science to the organization's evolving conservation work. She led an interdisciplinary program of scientists and economists dedicated to cutting-edge research and practice on ecosystem services, social science and economics, climate science, conservation methods and measures, and science communications. Molnar joined The Nature Conservancy in 2004 as part of an international team of scientists that collected, tracked, and analyzed global data to inform conservation. She was editor and a lead co-author of The Atlas of Global Conservation (University of California Press, 2010). Partnering with some 70 institutions around the world, she and her Conservancy co-authors compiled and developed an unprecedented number of global maps to describe the state of the natural world. Molnar worked with partners to make all of the data behind the maps publicly available online. She led global analyses of habitat condition and threats with a focus on marine and freshwater systems, including the first global assessment of the distribution, pathways, and ecological impacts of marine invasive species. Molnar received a master’s degree from Yale’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, where she now serves as a board member of the Alumni Association. She has a B.S. in environmental engineering from Harvard and has previous experience in hydrology and environmental remediation. Molnar has been both a Sawhill Global Leadership Fellow and a Doris Duke Conservation Fellow. She speaks frequently at national and international conferences, and publishes widely in the academic literature.
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