Back to Blue, an initiative of Economist Impact and The Nippon Foundation, brings together two organisations that share a common understanding of the need for evidence-based approaches to improving ocean health.
As we enter our second year, Back to Blue is pleased to convene a high-level board of expert advisors to help us achieve our mission to address ocean pollution and improve ocean health.
The board will be co-chaired by Mitsuyuki Unno, Executive Director, The Nippon Foundation and Charles Goddard, Editorial Director of Global Initiatives, Economist Impact.
We are very grateful for the support of the inaugural board members:
The advisory board is designed to provide guidance on the strategic direction and development of Back to Blue. This will include guidance on future priorities and, in particular, on how the work of the initiative can best develop programmes with impacts that are both actionable and measurable.
Back to Blue’s first year saw some notable achievements. The Plastic Management Index compared 25 countries at different stages of development in their management of plastics. The Invisible Wave raised the status of chemical pollution as a real priority for ocean health. We reached a global audience with a content programme of articles, films, podcasts and infographics and engaged directly with senior decision-makers in government, industry and the scientific community. We are confident that with the guidance of this expert advisory board Back to Blue will continue to deepen and strengthen our work towards a healthy ocean.
Charles Goddard, Editorial Director,
The Economist Group
Co-chair
Charles Goddard imagines and builds The Economist Group’s flagship initiatives. He works closely with partners on themes ranging from ageing and longevity to climate change, global health and the sustainable ocean economy. Based in Hong Kong, Charles was previously editorial director, Asia Pacific at the Economist Intelligence Unit and managing director of the Economist Corporate Network, a peer network for senior executives. He is executive director of the Group’s World Ocean Initiative.
Mitsuyuki Unno, Executive Director,
The Nippon Foundation
Co-chair
Mr. Mitsuyuki Unno is the Executive Director of The Nippon Foundation, a nongovernmental organization based in Tokyo, Japan. Since its establishment in 1962, The Nippon Foundation has been working to develop human capacity and new technologies in the maritime and ocean field. The foundation works with various UN agencies, governments, and academic institutions around the world to address the complex global challenges facing our oceans today.
Ann Dierckx graduated as an engineer in chemistry and agricultural sciences in 1990 at the Catholic University of Leuven. She holds a PhD in engineering in chemistry and agricultural sciences from the same university (1995). Prior to joining Cefic in 2008, she worked in the field of disposal of radioactive waste, first at the Belgian Nuclear Research Center in Mol, Belgium, later at the Belgian Agency for Radioactive Waste and Enriched Fissile Materials (NIRAS/ONDRAF) in Brussels where she held several coordinating positions.
Naoko Ishii is a professor and executive vice-president at the University of Tokyo, where she is also the inaugural director for the Centre for Global Commons, whose mission is to catalyse systems change so that humans can achieve sustainable development within planetary boundaries. Ms Ishii believes that academia can and should play an active role in mobilising movements towards shared goals of nurturing stewardship of the global commons. Before joining the university, she was chief executive officer and chairperson of the Global Environment Facility from 2012 to 2020.
Pascal Lamy is the President of the Paris Peace Forum and of the European branch of the Brunswick Group. He is also the Coordinator of the Jacques Delors Institutes (Paris, Berlin, Brussels). He is also President or member of various boards with a global, European or french vocation (European Starfish Mission (ocean), Mo Ibrahim Foundation, European Climate Foundation, IFPRI, PECC, CERRE, TMEA, Antarctica 2020, Transparency International, Alpbach Forum, Beijing Forum, World Trade Forum, WEF, Global Risks, Europaeum, Collegium international, Musiciens du Louvre, Institut Mendes-France, Colbert Foundation, etc.). He is an affiliated professor at the China Europe International Business School CEIBS (Shanghai) and at HEC (Paris).
Kilaparti Ramakrishna joined the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in October 2021 as senior advisor to the president and director on ocean and climate policy. Prior to this he worked with the United Nations as head of strategic planning at the Green Climate Fund; head of the Office for East and North-East Asia at the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific; and as chief of cross-sectoral environmental issues and principal policy advisor at the UN Environment Programme. Mr Ramakrishna was also a lead author of the fifth assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Vladimir Ryabinin was Executive Secretary of the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) of UNESCO and Assistant Director-General of UNESCO between March 2015 and February 2024. His previous research was on numerical weather prediction, marine meteorological services, offshore engineering, ocean and climate science. His current focus is on enabling science for sustainable ocean planning and management.
Elsie Sunderland’s research group studies the biogeochemistry of global contaminants, conducting field studies and modelling to better characterise the cycling and fate of heavy metals and organic contaminants, and associated human exposures and risks. Her research includes developing models at a variety of scales, ranging from ecosystems to global applications, to help characterise the impacts of past and future changes in climate and environmental releases of contaminants on human and ecological health.
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