Arctic Update Header
May 7, 2014

 

Alaska Policy Commission. May 6-7, 2014 (Anchorage, Alaska). The Alaska Arctic Policy Commission (AAPC) has more important work to do in 2014. The Commission will strive to gather public input and engage with Alaskan communities, state agencies, federal partners, and the international organizations working in the Arctic. In order to meet our goals AAPC will convene three in-person meetings over the course of 2014 and focus on implementation and final recommendations. Updated meeting information is available here.  

 

capital Today's Congressional Action:   

The Senate is expected to consider non-Arctic legislation. The House is expected to begin consideration of H.R. 4438, the American Research and Competitiveness Act of 2014 under a closed rule.

 

 

Media 

       

Alcohol Abuse Study: Banning Alcohol in Alaska Villages Doesn't Reduce Suicide, But More Jobs Might. Banning alcohol in Alaska's most isolated and cash-poor villages has failed to reduce suicide rates among the young Alaska Native men who live there, new research says. A study to be published in the American Journal of Public Health concludes that Alaska Natives are statistically less likely to kill themselves if they live in villages with prominent traditional elders, a high number of married couples and access to jobs. Yet outlawing alcohol in villages had no "statistically significant" impact on the number of 15- to 34-year-old Native men who kill themselves, the study found. Anchorage Daily News 

 

New Strategy Promotes Hunting as Cure to Nunavut Hunger. A new strategy from the Nunavut Food Security Coalition says helping people hunt and share more caribou, seal and other Inuit traditional food could help tackle the "food security crisis" in the territory. Research has shown that Canada's eastern Arctic territory of Nunavut has the lowest levels of food security -- defined as having access to safe, healthy food -- in the country. A 2007-08 survey found more than 70 percent of Inuit households in Nunavut are food insecure, eight times the national average. Alaska Dispatch 

 

Now Open for Business: An Arctic Chamber of Commerce. The benefits to Arctic development appear to be vast, but ensuring that businesses are ready to take advantage of that potential requires that they know what opportunities are available to them. In Iceland, that responsibility has fallen to the Icelandic-Arctic Chamber of Commerce, recently founded by the Icelandic Chamber of Commerce. Arctic Journal 

 

[Opinion] The Contradiction of Obama's Climate Policy. On the eve of the Obama administration's release Tuesday of a report warning about grave consequences of climate change, presidential counselor John Podesta went into the White House briefing room and crowed about fossil-fuel production in words that could have been penned by Dick Cheney. The Washington Post 

 

Mare Island Dry Docks Wins $5.1 Million Polar Star Contract. U.S. Rep. Mike Thompson (CA-5) today announced a $5.1 million U.S. Coast Guard (USCG) contract for Mare Island Dry Docks, LLC. The contract is for the dry docking and ship repairs of the icebreaker Polar Star. Mare Island Dry Docks LLC operates on an 18 acre located on the site of the former Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Vallejo, CA, that includes the yard's Dry Dock #2 and Dry Dock #3. The largest of the two has a length of 700 feet. Marine Log 

 

Coast Guard Plans Meetings on Arctic Operations. The Coast Guard is planning four open house meetings to discuss environmental effects of its 2014 Arctic plans. The first meeting will be Monday in Nome and will be followed by sessions in Anchorage, Kotzebue and Barrow. The Coast Guard plans air, water and shore operations. This year's activities will begin in July and last through October. Anchorage Daily News 

 

Marine Mammal Commission Focuses on Changing Arctic. At yesterday's start of the Marine Mammal Commission's annual meeting experts discussed the ways diminishing sea ice is affecting marine mammals and subsistence hunting. Now in it's 40th year of existence, the conference's setting in Washington, DC was slightly out of the ordinary. KNOM 

 

Pentagon - Defense Pentagon Fears Russia's Expansion in the Arctic. Chuck Hagel also said that the USA was going to strengthen its positions in the Arctic region, where there is a potential for conflicts to arise. "The melting of gigantic ice caps presents possibilities for the opening of new sea lanes and the exploration for natural resources, energy and commerce, also with the dangerous potential for conflict in the Arctic," said Hagel in Chicago. The interest in the Arctic region has been growing in the whole world during the recent years. The region is one of the priorities for Russia. President Vladimir Putin, at a meeting of the Security Council in April, instructed to create a unified basing system of surface ships and submarines of new generation in the Russian Arctic. Pravda 

Legislative Actionfutureevents  

 

No Arctic legislation as formally considered yesterday.

Future Events

 

Responding to Oil Spills in the US Arctic Marine Environment, May 12. (Webinar)

This webinar will provide a briefing on the new National Research Coucil report Responding to Oil Spills in the U.S. Arctic Marine Environment. Martha Grabowski, chair of the study committee, will discuss the report's main points regarding key oil spill research priorities, critical data and monitoring needs, mitigation strategies, and important operational and logistical issues. There will be an opportunity for questions at the conclusion of the briefing. See agenda here

 

Cumulative Impacts and Landscape Initiatives: A sustainability Check During Climate Change, May 18-22, 2014. (Anchorage, Alaska) US-IALE fosters landscape ecology in the United States, providing a link among practitioners in landscape ecology in the U.S. and the international community, and promoting interdisciplinary research and communication among scientists, planners, and other professionals concerned with landscape ecology. Program highlights will include plenary sessions with featured speakers, symposia and contributed papers, in-depth workshops on key topics, field trips, and networking events.

 

International Congress of Arctic Social Sciences, May 22-24, 2014. ICASS is held every three years, bringing together people from all over the world to share ideas about social science research in the Arctic. ICASS VII, held in Akureyri in June 2011, attracted 450 participants from 30 different countries. ICASS VIII's theme is Northern Sustainabilities. By using the plural, ICASS underscores both that 'sustainability' has social, cultural, economic, political and environmental dimensions, and that definitions of the concept vary. Yet, while debating specific definitions, most would agree that working toward sustainable ways of living in the North and on approaches to sustainable engagement with the North, are critical both to the North's and to the world's future. Community sustainability in the North, whether for small settlements or large urban conglomerations, requires new models of food and energy security, and of access to employment, health care and social and cultural services for residents.

 

Arctic in the Athropocene. June 23-July 2, 2014 (Potsdam, Germany). Under the overarching theme "Arctic in the Anthropocene", this two-week interdisciplinary and interactive event will be the first in a series of Potsdam Summer Schools to be held annually. The goal is to bring together early-career scientists and young professionals from research departments, governmental and non-governmental agencies and organizations, as well as the private sector from all around the world. Participants will deal with global challenges and address urgent questions on how to shape sustainable futures in the Arctic and beyond from a scientific and socioeconomic point of view. 

 

Alaska Policy Commission. August 26-27, 2014 (Kotzebue-Nome, Alaska). The Alaska Arctic Policy Commission (AAPC) has more important work to do in 2014. The Commission will strive to gather public input and engage with Alaskan communities, state agencies, federal partners, and the international organizations working in the Arctic. In order to meet our goals AAPC will convene three in-person meetings over the course of 2014 and focus on implementation and final recommendations. 

 

2014 FAMOS School and Workshop #3, October 21-24, 2014. (Woods Hole, MA) The Forum for Arctic Ocean Modeling and Observational Synthesis (FAMOS) is an international effort to focus on enhancing collaboration and coordination among Arctic marine and sea ice modelers, theoreticians and observationalists synthesize major results from the field studies and coordinated numerical experiments. The major themes of workshop include but not limited by studies focused on: predictions; Arctic observational and modeling initiatives; fate of sea ice in models and observations; atmospheric, sea ice and ocean dynamics; process studies and parameterizations; model validation and calibration; numerical improvements and algorithms; ecosystems, biological issues, and geochemistry.

 

Arctic Circle, October 31-November 2, 2014 (Reyjavik, Iceland).

The Arctic Circle is nonprofit and nonpartisan. Organizations, forums, think tanks, corporations and public associations around the world are invited to hold meetings within the Arctic Circle platform to advance their own missions and the broader goal of increasing collaborative decision-making without surrendering their institutional independence. The Arctic Circle will organize sessions on a variety of issues, such as: Sea ice melt and extreme weather; Polar law: treaties and agreements; The role and rights of indigenous peoples; Security in the Arctic; Shipping and transportation infrastructure; The prospects and risks of oil and gas drilling; Clean energy achievements and sustainable development; Arctic resources; Business cooperation in the Arctic; The role of Asian and European countries in the Arctic; Greenland in the new Arctic; Fisheries and ecosystem management; The science of ice: global research cooperation; Arctic tourism; The ice-dependent world: the Arctic and the Himalayas. 

 

Alaska Policy Commission. November 13-14, 2014 (Anchorage, Alaska). The Alaska Arctic Policy Commission (AAPC) has more important work to do in 2014. The Commission will strive to gather public input and engage with Alaskan communities, state agencies, federal partners, and the international organizations working in the Arctic. In order to meet our goals AAPC will convene three in-person meetings over the course of 2014 and focus on implementation and final recommendations. 

 

The Arctic Biodiversity Congress, December 2-4, 2014. (Trondheim, Norway). The Arctic Biodiversity Congress will present and discuss the main scientific findings of the ABA; facilitate inter-disciplinary discussion, action and status updates on the policy recommendations in the ABA; provide scientific, policy, management, NGO, academia, Indigenous peoples and industry audiences the opportunity to collaborate around the themes of the ABA; advise CAFF on national and international implementation of the ABA recommendations and on the development of an ABA Implementation Plan for the Arctic Council; highlight the work of CAFF and the Arctic Council on circumpolar biodiversity conservation and sustainable development; and, contribute to mainstreaming of biodiversity and ecosystem services, ensuring that the recommendations of the ABA are implemented by not just governments, but many organizations and people across disciplines.

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