Angel Hsu

  • Associate Professor of Public Policy and the Environment / Lead
  • University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill / Data-Driven EnviroLab (DDL)
  • https://datadrivenlab.org/

Dr. Angel Hsu is an Associate Professor of Public Policy and the Environment at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she also leads the Data-Driven EnviroLab (DDL), an interdisciplinary research lab pioneering the use of data to solve urgent environmental challenges. Her work sits at the intersection of science and policy, with a focus on Artificial Intelligence (AI), urbanization, air quality, and equity. Through DDL, she transforms complex, large-scale datasets into actionable insights that shape policy, drive accountability, and empower underrepresented communities, particularly in data-scarce regions of the Global South. A recognized thought leader in data-driven climate policy, Dr. Hsu has contributed to major scientific assessments, including as a lead author for the IPCC’s Special Report on Cities and Climate, contributing author to IPCC Sixth Assessment Report, and lead author of the 2018 UNEP Emissions Gap Report chapter on non-state and subnational actors. Dr. Hsu also serves on the North Carolina AI Leadership Council and has previously received grants from NASA and the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation for her climate work.

Dr. Hsu holds a Ph.D. in Environmental Policy from Yale University, a MPhil in Environmental Policy from the University of Cambridge, and a BS in Biology and BA in Political Science from Wake Forest University.

Sessions

  • Coding the Climate: AI, Technology, and the Next Frontier of Climate Action

    From predictive modeling to emergency response, artificial intelligence and emerging technologies are reshaping how we understand and address climate risk. This panel explores the promise and the pitfalls of technology in climate solutions including data equity, ethical concerns, and access gaps. Panelists will examine how innovation can accelerate climate action while ensuring communities are not […]

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