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September 11, 2019
    
Climate Change Discussions, September 8-13, 2019 (Fairbanks, Anchorage, and Juneau, Alaska USA). Climate scientist  Dr. KATHARINE HAYHOE  will be in the following Alaska cities to discuss  CLIMATE CHANGE.
September 8 - 11  -FAIRBANKS (contact  Tina Buxbaum  or  Charley Basham  for information)
September 13  - JUNEAU  (contact  Stuart Cohen  for information
Dr. KATHARINE HAYHOE  is an atmospheric scientist whose research focuses on developing and applying high-resolution climate projections to understand what climate change means for people and the natural environment.
Media

capital Wheeler Set to Testify Before Science Panel. EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler will make his first appearance before the House Science, Space and Technology Committee next week in what is likely to be a charged environment. The hearing, on the theme of "Science and Technology at the Environmental Protection Agency," will be held Sept. 19, according to a committee notice posted yesterday. A spokeswoman for Chairwoman Eddie Bernice Johnson did not reply to an email sent late in the day seeking more information on the hearing's goals, but the Texas Democrat has previously assailed the agency's handling of science on a number of other fronts. E&E News
 
canadian flag New Federal Arctic Policy Focuses on Human Health, Environment, Infrastructure. The federal government has released its long-awaited policy on developing the Canadian Arctic in a changing environmental and political world. But after three years of work on the lengthy document, some are left asking, "Where's the caribou?" The document proposes eight priorities. Health, infrastructure and economic development are at the top. Canada's National Observer
 
Explorer Becomes the First to Reach Deepest Point in All 5 Oceans. Hidden beneath the Fram Strait, a passage that separates Greenland and Svalbard, lies the deepest point in the Arctic Ocean, where the seafloor plunges some 18,209 feet (5,550 meters) down. And now, explorer Victor Vescovo has become the first person to ever reach it. The diving feat also makes him the first person to dive to the deepest part of all the world's oceans. On Aug. 24, Vescovo descended around to the bottom of the so-called Molloy Deep, a frigid trench that sits 170 miles (274 kilometers) west of Svalbard, Norway. LiveScience  
 
Below-Average Sea Ice Levels Are Expanding Arctic Shipping Options. Marine vessels of all sizes are transiting through the Arctic Ocean this season, some starting from Nome. And they have a couple of options for ice-free routes. According to the National Snow and Ice Data Center, or NSIDC, Arctic sea ice loss will likely continue for several weeks. The center says as of Aug. 31, sea ice extent dropped to the third-lowest amount on satellite record for that day: 1.78 million square miles. Around that same time, sea ice concentrations within the Northwest Passage were tracking below the average recorded between 1981-2010. KTOO
Future Events
       
Bridging Science, Art, and Community in the New Arctic, Sept. 23-25, 2019, (University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia USA). The University of Virginia (UVA) in Charlottesville, VA, is hosting a conference and workshop entitled "Bridging Science, Art, and Community in the New Arctic" from Sept. 23-25, 2019, sponsored by the National Science Foundation Navigating the New Arctic program, with additional support from UVA's Institute for Humanities and Global Cultures, and Center for Global Inquiry and Innovation. The UVA Environmental Resilience Institute's Arctic CoLab is organizing the event, with assistance from the Arctic Research Consortium of the U.S. (ARCUS).

EU Arctic Forum, October 3-4, 2019 ( Umeå, Sweden). The European Commission, the European External Action Service, and the Government of Sweden will jointly organize a high-level EU Arctic Forum . The EU Arctic Forum will bring together key Arctic players and stakeholders to assess recent developments in the region and to discuss the new challenges ahead. The EU Arctic Forum will include several keynote addresses and two high-level panel sessions on the morning of 3 October. Foreign ministers from EU member states as well as the Arctic Council will be invited to participate.
 
ADAC Funded Solicitation Opportunity. Proposals due October 7, 2019.   The Arctic Domain Awareness Center (ADAC) announces a competitive search to address research challenges associated with multiple Arctic response capability gaps and shortfalls in science and technology discerned from a two-part workshop conducted via " Stressing the System...managing a complex Arctic Crisis Arctic-related Incidents of National Significance workshop, (Arctic-IoNS). These workshops were conducted at University of Alaska Fairbanks Northwest Campus, Nome Alaska on 18-19 April 2019 and at the University of Alaska Anchorage from 20-22 May 2019.  ADAC principally seeks proposals that can smoothly transition from research to solutions and needed capability for USCG and other DHS Arctic maritime operators.  ADAC anticipates approximately three to five projects in varying funding amounts may be awarded under this solicitation. In order to facilitate suitable alignment to the research questions and associated project length as described in this RFP, ADAC respectfully recommends proposals scoped between approximately $200,000 to $350,000 U.S. dollars. 
 
Proposals  must be submitted in a single PDF (electronic format) to ADAC at the following email address: [email protected]with courtesy email to:   
jtroe2@alaska.edu and [email protected]
If application via electronic submission to email is not feasible, delivery via postal mail or commercial mail to:
 
Arctic Domain Awareness Center
University of Alaska Anchorage
BOC3 Suite 120
Anchorage, AK 99508
 
Deadline for receipt of the application (and validated by email response) is 
5 PM Alaska Daylight Time, Monday, 7 October 2019. For the full RFP and the supporting workshop reports, please visit this site:  https://arcticdomainawarenesscenter.org/Resources.html 
 
112th Meeting of the US Arctic Research Commission. October 9, 2019 (Reykjavik, Iceland). Details to follow...
 
2019 Arctic Circle Assembly, October 10-13, 2019 (Reykjaví­k, Iceland). The annual Arctic Circle Assembly is the largest annual international gathering on the Arctic, attended by more than 2000 participants from 60 countries. It is attended by heads of states and governments, ministers, members of parliaments, officials, experts, scientists, entrepreneurs, business leaders, indigenous representatives, environmentalists, students, activists and others from the growing international community of partners and participants interested in the future of the Arctic.
 
Large-scale Volcanism in the Arctic: The Role of the Mantle and Tectonics, October 13-18, 2019 (Selfoss, Iceland)The American Geophysical Union (AGU) Chapman Conference will focus on the diversity of Arctic magmatism and tectonics from the Paleozoic to present-day. The conveners are Owen Anfinson, Bernard Coakley, Carmen Gaina, and Grace Shephard. The program will focus on five themes including: Theme I: pre-breakup and rifting;Theme II: seafloor spreading;Theme III: mantle-derived heterogeneity (including plumes and large-igneous provinces);Theme IV: subduction related volcanism, and, Theme V: HALIP and environmental effects.  The website (link above) is open for abstract submission until June 19th and for meeting registration until September 9th. Funding is available for travel support, particularly for early career scientists. Travel support will be awarded on the basis of submitted abstracts and to promote diversity among attendees.
 
IX International Forum "Arctic: Today and the Future," December 5-7, 2019 (St. Petersburg, Russia). The forum will consider Arctic development issues. The forum is supported by the State Commission for the Development of the Arctic, the Federation Council, the State Duma, the Public Chamber of Russia, and various federal ministries and departments government bodies of the constituent entities of the Russian Federation.

ASM2019 Annual Scientific Meeting, December 2-5, 2019 (Halifax, NS Canada). Canada's North is experiencing unprecedented change in its sea and terrestrial ice, permafrost and ecosystems under the triple pressures of climate change, industrialization and modernization. The impacts of these pressures can be seen on food and energy security, shipping, sovereignty, northern community health and well-being, and sustainable development and resource exploitation. All these issues have brought the North to the forefront of national and international agendas. With a focus on networking events, this gathering of  leading Arctic researchers, graduate students, Northern community representatives, government and industry partners and stakeholders from all field s will provide all with  valuable connections where innovative ideas and initiatives  can  develop  in  support of health  and sound  governance in the Arctic.

American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting. December 9-13, 2019 (San Francisco, CA). As per usual, there will be a lot of Arctic research presented at this huge gathering. Details to follow...

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