Josephine Nehring
M. Sc. Transportation Planning and Operation (Technical University Berlin)
Researcher
+49 (0)30 1208 434 83 josephine.nehring@rl-institut.deActivities
- Deputy project manager for the hydrogen topic area
- Preparation of interim and final reports
- Quantitative methods: Analysis of geodata and creation, implementation and evaluation of surveys
- Qualitative methods: Interviews
- Programming in Python
Personal Information
Josephine Nehring has been a researcher in the research unit Mobility with Renewable Energy since October 2024, focusing primarily on the topic of hydrogen. She has been at the RLI since March 2023, initially working in the Off-Grid Systems research unit on the project “Feminist and Inclusive Research for Climate-Friendly Mobility in Berlin” (FAIRberlin) until December 2023. From January to May 2024, she supported the Off-Grid team in preparing a market potential study for the deployment of green hydrogen in ten Southeast Asian countries as part of the H2 SEA project. Between January and July 2024, she wrote her master’s thesis within the Mobility with Renewable Energy research unit, which she also supported with smaller content-related research on electricity markets and electromobility in June. In her thesis, she examined the relationship between social disadvantage and the accessibility of public services and public transport in Berlin.
Josephine completed her master’s degree in “Planning and Operation in Transport” at the Technical University of Berlin. Before joining RLI, she interned at the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ) in China and was involved in evaluating the car-free Friedrichstraße project. Previously, she gained experience as a working student in logistics as part of the research project “KOPKIB – Customer-Oriented Parcel Delivery by Neighborhood Couriers” at the Berlin University of Applied Sciences and Technology, where she also earned her bachelor’s degree in Economics and Politics. As part of academic exchange programs, she spent extended periods in Shanghai and Istanbul.