As one of the leading climate scientists worldwide, he has been a consultant to the former President of the
European Union Commission,
José Manuel Barroso. In 2007, he was appointed Chief Government Advisor on Climate and Related Issues during Germany's EU Council Presidency and G8 Presidency. In 2007, Schellnhuber started "A Nobel Cause – Nobel Laureate Symposium Series on Global Sustainability" in Potsdam, bringing together Nobel Laureates from all disciplines with leading sustainability scientists. In 2009, this event took place in London and in 2011 in Stockholm, where the UN secretary-general's High Level Panel on Sustainability came to the meeting to receive a
memorandum that was fed into the Rio+20 conference in 2012. Schellnhuber offers scientific insights to business leaders, as a member of the Climate Change Advisory Board of
Deutsche Bank and chair of the governing board of the
European Institute of Innovation and Technology's Climate Knowledge and Innovation Communities (EIT Climate KIC). In 2012, he was the lead-author of a report commissioned by the
World Bank This report received a lot of attention worldwide. That same year, Schellnhuber presented the keynote at the gala dinner that opened the high-level segment of the world climate summit
COP18 in Doha, Qatar. In the presence of UN Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon and
UNFCCC's boss
Christiana Figueres, a few days later Schellnhuber signed an agreement with the
Qatar Foundation to jointly create a Climate change research institute in Qatar – a remarkable step as the country's wealth for decades had been based on exporting fossil fuels. In 2013, Schellnhuber was one of 18 prominent international scientists to launch the Earth League, a global interdisciplinary alliance of leading research institutes that focus on Earth system analysis and sustainability science, including economy. UN Security Council members Pakistan and UK asked him to speak at a meeting of the Council under the
Arria Formula, the meeting at the UN headquarter in New York was attended by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. In the runup of the world climate summit in Warsaw, Schellnhuber discussed possible ways forward with the president of
Cop19, the Polish Minister of the Environment
Marcin Korolec. To advance the state of science, Schellnhuber initiated the Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Intercomparison Project (ISI-MIP) that involves more than 30 research teams from 12 countries. In 2013, the scientific journal
Nature called it the "first comprehensive global-impact project" – it aims at identifying robust insights as well as research gaps, based on a yet unprecedentedly broad comparison of computer simulations of future climate change impacts such as
water scarcity, floodings, or yield changes. In 2013, Schellnhuber's efforts resulted in the Impacts World Conference in Potsdam followed by a special feature on first ISI-MIP results in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS). Schellnhuber has been serving as chair of the Climate-KIC (Knowledge and Innovation Community) governing board, which is affiliated to the
European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT). This institution aims at fostering low-carbon entrepreneurship and innovation. Schellnhuber signed the 2005
Potsdam Denkschrift calling for a change in thinking to enable
sustainable development. ==Personal life==