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IV (Irina) Verweij-Novikova, PhD

IV (Irina) Verweij-Novikova, PhD

WR Onderzoeker

Biography

Biography

Irina holds a PhD degree in Agricultural Economics from Wageningen University (2004) and has 20 years’ of experience in impact assessments of agricultural and environmental policies. Last years she has been engaged in sustainability related projects and environmental footprinting of agri-food products. Specifically, she coordinated and contributed to Public-Private-Partnership project on developing Category Rules for LCA-based assessments of environmental footprint of Cut Flowers, Potted Plants and for Fresh Fruits and vegetables. During 2014-2017 she worked for consulting company Delphy (formerly known as DVL Plant) where she was managing horticulture related projects related to knowledge dissemination and worked with private clients as well as donors like USAID, RVO, NUFFIC. In 2013-2014 she was a program manager for the foundation “Greenport Holland International”, focusing on developing business leads in countries like Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, Armenia for companies and knowledge institutes from the Dutch Horticultural sector. During her previous work for Wageningen Economic Research in 2007-2013 she was co-leading an EU FP6 project on impact assessment of land use policies in developing countries. In EU project SEAMLESS she was responsible for synthesising methodologies and approaches, for linking farm bio-economic models and sector model (CAPRI, Bonn).

About

Personal information

Address

Droevendaalsesteeg 4
6708PB WAGENINGEN

Building

Atlas
104/Flex

Telephone

+31317480859

Secretary

+31317480100

Mobile

+31641334956

Expertise

Agricultural economics, Agricultural policy, Agricultural systems, Climate change, Education, Environmental policy, General economics, Horticulture, Farm accountancy data, Farm management, Agribusiness, Modeling, Models, Research projects, Sustainability indicators, Sustainable development, Transition economies, Integrated systems, Interdisciplinary research, Land use, Eastern Europe, Ukraine, Russia

Subdivision

Sustainable Value Chains