Staff profiles
Finn ScheeleSenior Risk Scientist
Qualifications
- BSc, Geology
- MSc, Hazard and Disaster Management
Areas of expertise
- Business Development: GIS
- Business Development: Geospatial analysis
- Business Development: Disaster Risk Management
- Business Development: Hazard Assessment
- Business Development: Hazards Impact on Society
- Business Development: Hazards Warning Systems
- Business Development: Impact Assessment
- Business Development: Impact Monitoring and Evaluation
- Business Development: Impact-based warnings
- Business Development: Land-use planning
- Business Development: Natural Hazards Research
- Business Development: Numerical Modelling
- Business Development: Risk Assessment
- Business Development: Risk Communication
- Business Development: Risk Governance
- Business Development: Risk Transfer
- Business Development: Risk reduction
- Business Development: Science project leadership
- Business Development: Stakeholder engagement
- Business Development: Statistical modeling
Publications
Selection of major publications
- Stay-or-relocate model (STORM) : an agent-based population displacement simulator applied to a multi-phase volcanic eruption scenario, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 136: article 106059. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2026.106059. article 106059
- Estimating fire following earthquake risk for Wellington City, New Zealand, Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering 55(4): p. 241-256. DOI: 10.5459/bnzsee.55.4.241-256. p. 241-256
- Planning for resilience of water networks under earthquake hazard A case study for Rotorua District, New Zealand, Bulletin of the New Zealand Society for Earthquake Engineering 54(2): p. 135-152. DOI: 10.5459/bnzsee.54.2.135-152. p. 135-152
- Modelling residential habitability and human displacement for tsunami scenarios in Christchurch, New Zealand, International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction 43: article 101403. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2019.101403. article 101403
- Does the future of tsunami intensity scales lie in past events?, Natural Hazards 80(1): p. 401-424. DOI: 10.1007/s11069-015-1994-1. p. 401-424