Environmental Science MSc
Year of entry 2026
- Start date
- September 2026
- Delivery type
- On campus
- Duration
- 12 Months (Full time)
- Entry requirements
- A bachelor degree with a 2:1 (hons)
Full entry requirements - English language requirements
- IELTS 6.5 overall, with no less than 6.0 in any component.
- UK fees
- £14,000 (Total)
- International fees
- £32,000 (Total)
- Contact
- apply-masters@see.leeds.ac.uk
Course overview

Help protect our world by learning how to tackle the biggest environmental problems threatening our way of life.
Our planet faces many complex challenges. Climate change. Biodiversity loss. Dwindling resources. It’s up to the next generation of environmental scientists to help address these issues with innovative, practical solutions.
This course helps you understand the environmental impact of human activity, from which you’ll design and build solutions to help counteract its effects.
It’s a multidisciplinary programme that offers you a grounding knowledge in the physical and chemical operation of Earth’s oceans, atmosphere, climate and terrestrial water cycle. You’ll understand how human activities are disturbing these systems and engage in practical training to measure and assess environmental problems.
You can also tailor your course with options that will equip you for a career in delivering environmental solutions, solving related problems, informing policy or further study.
By the end of your course, you’ll have the expertise to analyse our environment and help safeguard it for future generations.
Speak to people. Evaluate your priorities. If it aligns with your goals, there are so many opportunities to explore by studying in the UK. It builds your confidence. You get to test yourself and be open to all experiences.
Why study at Leeds
- Recognised research: Our globally-renowned research conducted here in our School of Earth and Environment feeds directly into your course, shaping your learning with the latest thinking in environmental science.
- Your course, your choice: Advance your knowledge and skills in critical areas in environmental science, with the flexibility to tailor your course to what interests you through a range of optional modules.
- Think like an environmentalist: Conduct your own research project as part of your course and gain experience in researching and delivering a project that focuses on a real-world problem, allowing you to explore your specific interests.
- Gain essential skills: Learn invaluable skills in scientific research, critical analysis and communication, coding, data analysis and visualisation and machine learning.
- Expert tutors: Experience excellent practical and theoretical teaching by tutors who have years of research and field campaign experience from within the School of Earth and Environment.
- Get industry experience: Get the chance to collaborate with clients and gain consultancy experience as part of our 2-week online Global Industry Programme.
Guaranteed industry experience
During your time at Leeds, you’ll have the chance to work with clients and gain consultancy experience as part of a 2-week online Global Industry Programme.
As well as giving you the opportunity to build key industry connections, you’ll also develop invaluable professional and practical skills that are highly valued by employers.
Course details and modules
The MSc Environmental Science is designed to be flexible to respond to your interests and existing skill sets and prepare you for a future career practicing environmental science in a range of industries, government departments, non-governmental organisations, or in academia. There are core modules in scientific communication to different audiences, data analysis and presentation, and environmental science practice which will develop skills valued by employers, explore the fundamental principles of studying the environment and set environmental science in a broader context.
A range of optional modules offer the chance to study different aspects of Earth’s environment such as climate change, oceanography, air quality, land use, groundwater and atmospheric processes and develop additional skills such as machine learning, statistics, GIS and remote sensing. There are two suggested pathways through the course: environmental systems and modelling, and environmental science practice, or you can choose a bespoke combination of optional modules to tailor your experience to your desired career. The ideas for the final projects are developed throughout the year and completed over the summer.
The course develops key skills such as critical thinking and analysis, science communication, independent research, teamwork, problem solving, and presenting. After completing the programme, you’ll be able to:
- Research and communicate complex scientific ideas to different audiences
- Understand the process of environmental data acquisition, analysis and presentation using primary measurements or secondary data
- Display knowledge of fundamental physical and chemical processes in the Earth system and how these interact with human activities
- Apply knowledge of the way the Earth operates to critically evaluate an environmental problem
Course structure
The list shown below represents typical modules/components studied and may change from time to time. Read more in our terms and conditions.
Compulsory modules
Scientific Quality and Discourse – 15 credits
Build the fundamental skills of science communication to different audiences in written, graphical and verbal forms enabling complicated ideas to be delivered in a clear and scientifically precise format appropriate to the setting. You’ll learn how scientific quality and significance are defined and learn to create different content types such as journal articles, project proposals, policy briefs, abstracts, pieces for non-specialists, conference presentations, posters etc.
Advanced Data Analysis and Visualisation – 15 credits
You’ll be trained in UNIX environments and the Python programming language to import, manipulate, compare and plot a range of environment related datasets using a variety of different plotting styles. Python packages relevant to environmental research are introduced and you’ll learn how to understand and modify complex code using efficient coding techniques.
Environmental Science Practice – 15 credits
Develop a grounding in the distinct features of environmental science that distinguishes it from other STEM subjects such as making measurements in varied and challenging landscapes and its interaction with human social structures and governance. You’ll explore a case study of the intersection of human priorities and natural processes, and undertake a short field course where you’ll gain experience of making measurements in a range of settings, visiting sites which illustrate key issues and solutions for environmental problems.
Environmental Science Research Project – 60 credits
This project is your chance to tailor your learning and apply it to an independent piece of research, inspired by your career aspirations or interests. Research can encompass primary data collection in the field or labs, interrogating environmental databases or model results to address a specific research question, or delivering a state-of-the-art technical report and policy brief addressing the interface between science and society.
Through this project, you’ll build invaluable skills in collating, critically analysing and presenting research alongside transferable skills in data collection, time management, working independently and organisation which will prepare you for your future career – whether that be in academia or industry.
Optional modules
You’ll have the flexibility to choose a combination of optional modules or one of the suggested pathways:
- Environmental Systems and Modelling
- Environmental Science Practice
Please note: The modules listed below are indicative of typical options.
Environmental systems and modelling pathway
Machine Learning and Statistics – 15 credits
Discover how to choose and apply appropriate statistical methodologies in your research, including significance testing, regression, and non-parametric statistics. You’ll learn how to use machine learning models such as deep learning to aid your research.
Advanced Air Pollution Science and Regulation – 15 credits
Explore the sources and sinks of air pollution and its impacts on human health and ecosystems. Learn about the methods and strategies for monitoring air pollution, emission control strategies and their economic implication. Apply computer modelling to determine policy-relevant pollution control strategies.
Terrestrial Biosphere in the Earth System – 15 credits
Develop an understanding of the important physical, biological and chemical processes through which terrestrial ecosystems interact with climate, including biosphere-atmosphere couplings of carbon, water and energy. This module will also explore the policy implications of ecosystem – climate interactions and includes the opportunity to explore topical research questions using a global vegetation model.
Advanced Atmosphere and Ocean Climate Change Processes – 15 credits
Provides training in the science of global climate change, climate modelling, and the physical coupling and feedback of significant atmospheric and ocean processes currently thought responsible for the observed rapid changes in the Earth’s climate. The module emphasises links and feedbacks between different parts of the climate system. A simple climate model is used to investigate the effects of different processes.
Biogeochemical Cycles of the Earth System – 15 credits
Learn about the cycling of elements at the Earth’s surface that provide critical controls on biological and climate processes such as phosphorus, nitrogen and carbon, developing an understanding of the general principles of biogeochemistry before studying the cycles of specific elements and their interaction. A biogeochemical model is used to explore how changes in these cycles interact with the Earth system.
Sustainable Groundwater Futures – 15 credits
Explore how groundwater fits into the hydrological cycle and learn how to understand and predict the impacts of groundwater abstraction and recharge. You’ll learn about the controls on hydraulic conductivity, be able to explain how the chemical composition of natural groundwaters develops and the main factors controlling groundwater vulnerability to pollution and approaches for assessing this, along with sustainable approaches to groundwater management.
Environmental Science Practice pathway
Environmental Data Visualisation & Analysis – 15 credits
Develops core visualisation and analysis skills for spatial data using industry standard Geographic Information System (GIS) software. Students will become familiar with concepts and quantitative techniques used to analyse different types of human and environmental data equipping them to produce and communicate high quality outputs that can be used to for decision making and research.
Environmental Assessment – 15 credits
This purpose of this module is to:
- provide a vocationally oriented introduction to the principles and practice of environmental assessment (EA)
- develop an awareness of the historical development of EA, its scope, processes and techniques, and current legislation (principally EU / UK)
- provide an integrating framework for knowledge and skills gained elsewhere.
You’ll gain an appreciation of the wider context for the application of available tools rather than detailed practice in a specific sub-discipline.
Machine Learning and Statistics – 15 credits
Discover how to choose and apply appropriate statistical methodologies in your research, including significance testing, regression, and non-parametric statistics. You’ll learn how to use machine learning models such as deep learning to aid your research.
Advanced Air Pollution Science and Regulation – 15 credits
Explore the sources and sinks of air pollution and its impacts on human health and ecosystems. Learn about the methods and strategies for monitoring air pollution, emission control strategies and their economic implication. Apply computer modelling to determine policy-relevant pollution control strategies.
Sustainable Groundwater Futures – 15 credits
Explore how groundwater fits into the hydrological cycle and learn how to understand and predict the impacts of groundwater abstraction and recharge. You’ll learn about the controls on hydraulic conductivity, be able to explain how the chemical composition of natural groundwaters develops and the main factors controlling groundwater vulnerability to pollution and approaches for assessing this, along with sustainable approaches to groundwater management.
Advanced Atmosphere and Ocean Climate Change Processes – 15 credits
Provides training in the science of global climate change, climate modelling, and the physical coupling and feedback of significant atmospheric and ocean processes currently thought responsible for the observed rapid changes in the Earth’s climate. The module emphasises links and feedbacks between different parts of the climate system. A simple climate model is used to investigate the effects of different processes.
Digital Image Processing for Environmental Remote Sensing – 15 credits
This module introduces the fundamental principles behind satellite image acquisition, processing and interpretation to extract meaningful environmental information. Students will learn how to evaluate and pre-process data before analysis, and use industry leading software to extract information about the Earth’s surface from diverse types of remote sensing images.
Fieldwork
A 1-day field course to a UK destination will run at the start of the course to allow students and staff to get to know each other, and to introduce a case study of the application of environmental science.A 4-day UK field course in semester 1 is designed to build an appreciation of the complexities and challenges that data collection in the environment poses. Some optional module choices also include field days.
Learning and teaching
You will learn via a blended-learning approach using a mixture of fieldwork, in-person lectures, and in-class activities such as workshops or seminars with support from digital materials. The final project offers the choice of different formats to allow students to tailor the development of their science communication skills towards their career interests.
Our teaching is led by internationally recognised experts in their respective fields who are actively researching many of the subjects that they teach, and who bring this experience into the classroom and field.
Specialist facilities
The School of Earth and Environment offers excellent facilities for developing theoretical and practical skills in environmental science with specialist laboratories for the analysis of air, water, soils and sediments alongside extensive technical support, a range of field equipment for making offsite measurements and specialist computing facilities.
The School hosts the Centre for Environmental Modelling and Computation and has an exceptional track record in the modelling of climate, atmospheric chemistry, air quality and biogeochemistry. Our staff have years of research and field campaign experience to draw on in their teaching.
Programme team
On this course, you’ll be taught by our expert academics, from lecturers through to professors. You may also be taught by industry professionals with years of experience, as well as trained postgraduate researchers, connecting you to some of the brightest minds on campus.
Assessment
The course will be assessed through a diverse range of approaches such as posters, oral presentations, a variety of documents for different audiences and purposes (e.g. scientific paper, technical report, policy brief, funding proposal), numerical modelling and report writing. Many of these assessments are directly relevant to potential career choices and the development of key skills valued by employers such as critical thinking, data analysis and presentation and quantitative evidence-based approaches to problem solving.
Applying
Entry requirements
A bachelor degree with a 2:1 (hons) in engineering, environmental science, technology, chemistry, physics, physical geography, biology, ecology, physical science or mathematics subjects.
Evidence of numerical modules in prior study required, such as, but not limited to, mathematics, statistics, data science, physics, theoretical engineering, ecology, analytical and physical chemistry, programming and computer science.
Applicants with a 2:2 (hons) will be considered on a case-by-case basis where they can demonstrate relevant work experience or competence in a relevant specialist field.
Professional qualifications and relevant experience can also be considered.
International
We accept a range of international equivalent qualifications. For more information, please contact the Admissions Team.
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5 overall, with no less than 6.0 in any component.. For other English qualifications, read English language equivalent qualifications.
Improve your English
International students who do not meet the English language requirements for this programme may be able to study our postgraduate pre-sessional English course, to help improve your English language level.
This pre-sessional course is designed with a progression route to your degree programme and you’ll learn academic English in the context of your subject area. To find out more, read Language for Science (6 weeks) and Language for Science: General Science (10 weeks).
We also offer online pre-sessionals alongside our on-campus pre-sessionals. Find out more about our six week online pre-sessional and our 10 week online pre-sessional.
You can also study pre-sessionals for longer periods – read about our postgraduate pre-sessional English courses.
How to apply
Application deadlines
Please read our How to Apply page for full details, including application deadlines and what to include with your application.
Applicants are encouraged to apply as early as possible.
31 July 2026 – International applicants
11 September 2026 – UK applicants
Click below to access the University’s online application system and find out more about the application process.
If you're still unsure about the application process, contact the admissions team for help.
Read about visas, immigration and other information in International students. We recommend that international students apply as early as possible to ensure that they have time to apply for their visa.
Admissions policy
University of Leeds Admissions Policy 2026
This course is taught by
School of Earth, Environment and Sustainability
Contact us
School of Earth, Environment and Sustainability Postgraduate Admissions Team
Fees
UK: £14,000 (Total)
International: £32,000 (Total)
Read more about paying fees and charges.
For fees information for international taught postgraduate students, read Masters fees.
Additional cost information
Travel, accommodation and subsistence costs associated with compulsory field trips are covered by the university.
There may be additional costs related to your course or programme of study, or related to being a student at the University of Leeds. Read more on our living costs and budgeting page.
Scholarships and financial support
If you have the talent and drive, we want you to be able to study with us, whatever your financial circumstances. There may be help for students in the form of loans and non-repayable grants from the University and from the government. Find out more at Masters funding overview.
Scholarships are also available to help fund your Masters. Find out more and check your eligibility below:
Career opportunities
With this course, you’ll develop your environmental knowledge base and the quantitative expertise to ask the important questions. These skills are highly desirable to a range of employers both in the private and public sectors. You’ll be well placed to take up a variety of careers, including:
- environmental management and assessment services
- environmental advisory services
- geo-environmental services
- sustainable water management
- hydrogeology and flood risk
- educators and teachers
- climate science advisors
- corporate social responsibility officers
- environmental campaigners
- project and programme managers
Potential employers include government environment protection agencies and international consultancies such as AECOM, Arup, Atkins, Jacobs, JBA and WSP. Additionally, many companies have formal graduate schemes with an MSc Environmental Science listed as their route to entry. This course also provides the training you need to undertake a PhD in this area.
Where this degree could take you
Here’s an insight into the job roles some of our graduates from our School have obtained:
- Consultant, Carbon Intelligence
- Local Transport Solutions Officer, Development Trust Association Scotland
- Economist, Natural England
- Assistant Project Manager, Network Rail
- Business Development Manager, Cofely UK – GDF SUEZ
- Senior Policy Analyst, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment
Top 10 most targeted for 10+ years
by the UK's leading employers
Careers support
At Leeds, we help you to prepare for your future from day one.
Our Careers Service has the global expertise and sector-spanning industry partnerships that, combined, go way beyond simply helping you get a job. They provide you with the resources you need to upskill and achieve the future you aspire towards – even in the face of lightning-paced change.
- Dedicated Employability Team – meet with our qualified careers consultants and specialist employability and placements officers, on hand to help you choose the right path and develop the skills to get there. They can support with CV and cover letter writing, LinkedIn profile building, mock interviews and navigating AI: get confident with tailored advice and techniques.
- Employability and networking events – get involved in a full range of events, including careers fairs and specialist industry talks with employers who are actively recruiting. You’ll also benefit from mentoring and a supportive careers community, helping you make connections, build your network, and shape your journey as a future professional.
- Skills training – we embed transferable skills training in all our programmes to support your transition to the workplace. Gain expertise employers value, such as communication, problem-solving and research and data analysis.
- MyCareer system —– access a dedicated portal where you can book careers appointments, view helpful resources and browse vacancies and events. Access digital tools, including LinkedIn support, video‑interview preparation, plus global job market and visa guidance. We also offer pre‑arrival support to help you prepare for career planning in the UK and make the most of your time with us.
- Exclusive opportunities – bring your enterprise to market with our award-winning business advice service, Spark. Apply for vacancies only available to our students. And hone your skills further with Leeds University Union, home to volunteering opportunities and over 300 clubs and societies.
Work placements and industry experience
As a Masters student at Leeds, you’ll have the unique opportunity to gain real-world industry experience with our Global Industry Programme.
You’ll develop key professional skills and gain invaluable insight into working in your chosen field, helping to solve a real business problem from a live company brief.
This experience will enhance your CV, helping you stand out in the competitive graduate jobs market and improving your chances of securing the career you want.
Benefits of the Global Industry Programme:
- Fully online and designed to fit around your studies.
- Opportunities to make professional networks in areas such as digital marketing, business growth, sustainability and funding strategy.
- Gain valuable insight and build consultancy experience with a UK or international organisation, working on a time limited brief.
- Work as part of a team across disciplines to tackle real business needs.
- Advance your experience and hands-on skills by putting the course teachings into practice.
- Improve your employability prospects.
- Make new friends, build confidence and consider your future plans.