Subject guides / Climate Governance
Climate Governance
Also appears in programme titles as: Climate Change Policy · Climate Change, Management and Finance · Global Climate Politics
What a climate governance degree actually is
Carbon border taxes, loss-and-damage funds, national net-zero laws, COP negotiating texts — climate change is now governed, not just studied. Climate governance is the field that trains people to write, negotiate and implement those rules. It borrows from economics, international relations and environmental science, but its centre of gravity is institutions: who decides, who pays, who enforces.
Not a single programme in our verified map actually carries the name "climate governance". Schools file the field under environmental economics (LSE), environmental change and policy (Oxford), climate science-and-policy hybrids (King's), or climate finance (Imperial, Edinburgh). The label you search determines what you find — use the map below, not the search bar.
What you study — and the quantitative bar
Common elements: climate science fundamentals, environmental economics, international climate law and negotiations, and policy evaluation. The finance-flavoured programmes (Imperial, Edinburgh) add carbon accounting and investment analysis; the science-flavoured ones (King's, Wageningen) add modelling and earth-system courses.
The quantitative bar splits by flavour: policy tracks need statistics literacy, economics tracks need proper micro and econometrics, and finance tracks expect comfort with accounting and valuation. Humanities graduates thrive in the governance strands but should check each programme's economics prerequisites.
Where it leads
Exits cluster in four places: international bodies (UNFCCC secretariat, World Bank climate teams, IEA/IRENA), national ministries and climate agencies, the carbon-markets industry (project developers, registries, rating agencies), and consultancies building corporate transition plans. For developing-country applicants this is one of the strongest scholarship narratives available: climate capacity is an explicit funding priority across nearly every major scheme.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Public-sector and NGO professionals working on energy, environment or disaster policy
- Economists and finance professionals moving into carbon markets or climate investment
- Scholarship applicants from climate-vulnerable countries — the strongest possible match between personal story and funder priorities
Probably not the right degree if…
- Applicants who want to do climate science itself — that is an atmospheric science or earth-systems MSc
- Engineers seeking technical renewable-energy training: see Renewable Energy Engineering instead
- Anyone allergic to reading legal and institutional texts — the field is documents all the way down
Where to study it: the programme map
Eight verified programmes, zero of which are literally named "climate governance" — the strongest naming-chaos case in our guides so far. Official links and verification dates on every row.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| King's College LondonUnited Kingdom | Climate Change: Environment, Science and Policy MSc | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited Kingdom | MSc Environmental Economics and Climate Change | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited Kingdom | MSc Environment and Development | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Environmental Change and Policy | 12 mo | — | — |
| Wageningen University & ResearchNetherlands | MSc Climate Studies | 24 mo | — | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Choose your flavour first: governance/policy (Oxford, LSE policy strand), economics (LSE environmental economics), finance (Imperial, Edinburgh), or science-policy (King's, Wageningen). Applying across flavours with one generic essay is the most common rejection pattern — the programmes read as different disciplines.
Funding is unusually rich: the UK one-year formats fit Chevening; DAAD's EPOS list is dense with environment and resource-management courses for developing-country applicants; Commonwealth themes explicitly include climate resilience. Wageningen's two-year format falls outside Chevening but pairs with Erasmus Mundus-style and Dutch routes — check length rules before anchoring on a school.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- King's College London
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University of Oxford
- Wageningen University & Research — study destination outside the scheme
- King's College London
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University of Oxford
- Wageningen University & Research — study destination outside the scheme
- King's College London — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Oxford — study destination outside the scheme
- Wageningen University & Research — study destination outside the scheme
Frequently asked questions
Climate governance vs environmental policy — what is the difference?
Environmental policy is the broader field (pollution, biodiversity, land use); climate governance is its fastest-growing subfield, focused on emissions rules, carbon pricing and international climate institutions. Many programmes cover both — check the module list rather than the title.
Do I need a science background?
No for governance and finance strands (they teach the science fundamentals you need); helpful for the science-policy hybrids like King's or Wageningen. Economics prerequisites bite harder than science ones at LSE.
Which scholarships fund climate degrees?
Almost all major ones treat climate as a priority: Chevening (UK one-year courses), DAAD EPOS (German development-related courses), Commonwealth (climate resilience theme), and Australia Awards. Climate-vulnerable-country applicants have a structural advantage in selection.
Is the field employable outside government?
Increasingly yes — carbon markets, ESG teams, transition consulting and climate-tech policy roles have grown faster than public-sector hiring. The governance skill set (rules, accounting, negotiation) is exactly what the private compliance market buys.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.