June 16-20, 2024 | Whitehorse, Yukon Canada and virtual
ICOP 2024: Integrating Perspectives of Permafrost Thaw, Change, and Adaptation
| The 12th International Conference on Permafrost will consider “Integrating Perspectives of Permafrost Thaw, Change, and Adaptation.” The conference will address the most recent developments and stimulate engaging technical and scientific discussions among academics, professionals, contractors, suppliers, and students. The impacts of climate change and economic development have significantly changed the Arctic, in recent decades, resulting in a wealth of research initiatives and challenging engineering projects. Event partners include the Canadian Permafrost Association, IPA, and Yukon University. | |
The Arctic is Warming Rapidly. These Clouds May Hold Clues as to Why | |
In the Arctic, a mysterious atmospheric phenomenon generates some of the oddest clouds on Earth. Up there, streaky wisps can swiftly transform into towering thunderstorms. These strange clouds are not just visually mesmerizing. Nor are they just drivers of powerful storms. They may also play a role in the Arctic’s breakneck pace of warming, researchers say, a pace about four times as fast as that of the rest of the planet. | |
Earth From Space: Trio of Ringed Ice Caps Look Otherworldly on Russian Arctic Islands | |
This 2018 satellite photo of ice caps on the Arctic islands of Russia's Severnaya Zemlya archipelago highlights the beautiful concentric rings of color in the ice, which stand out against the islands' barren landscape. | |
Nations Push Back the Timeline for Arctic Fishing Rules | |
Arctic coastal states have failed to agree on a protocol for commercial fishing in the central Arctic Ocean. The countries had met last week in South Korea for the third conference of parties (COP3) on the Central Arctic Ocean Fisheries Agreement (CAOFA), but could not reach a deal. The parties include Canada, China, Denmark on behalf of Faroes Islands and Greenland, Iceland, South Korea, Norway, Russia, United States and EU. | |
Moscow Continues to Push for BRICS Science Center at Svalbard | |
The statement from Moscow comes two weeks after the Norwegian Government presented its White Paper on Svalbard policy. Here, Oslo makes it clear that UNIS - the University Centre of Svalbard shall be the only to offer higher education at the archipelago that is under Norwegian sovereignty. | |
An Influx of Chum Salmon in the Canadian Arctic Could be the Same Fish Missing from Western Alaska | |
Johnnie Storr grew up fishing with his dad in the hamlet of Aklavik, a small town on the Mackenzie River delta in Canada’s Northwest Territories. Depending on the season, they looked for Arctic char, Dolly Varden or whitefish. “We fished for char in the fall time,” Storr said. “Soon as there was enough ice we walked out and set nets for whitefish.” | |
NOAA Researchers Study Sea Ice Retreat, Link To Harmful Algal Blooms | |
Last week a team of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration researchers arrived in Nome to launch the third year of a study that seeks to study sea ice retreat and chart phytoplankton in the northern Bering Sea. The Arctic Airborne Investigations and Research mission, AIR for short, aims to collect data that – among other research objectives - will be used to help predict harmful algal blooms, HABs for short. | |
Landscape of Tribal Communities | |
The Alaska Center for Climate Assessment and Policy released a new set of resources to help people understand the complexities of Tribal and rural communities in Alaska. The materials include a background article and two graphics. The graphics help people visualize the overwhelming number of external and internal forces that Tribes and Tribal members deal with daily. The article covers other important factors including: capacity limitations at Tribal organizations; the complex governing system within Alaska Tribes; and the climate grief that individuals and communities may experience. | |
NEW THIS WEEK | noon on June 21, 2024 | Webinar
June 2024 NWS Alaska Climate Outlook Briefing
| Alaska Center for Climate Assessment Policy hosts this event on recent and current climate conditions around Alaska, discuss forecasting tools, and finish up with the Climate Prediction Center’s forecast for July 2024 and the summer season. Join the gathering online to learn what’s happened and what may be in store with Alaska’s seasonal climate. | |
1:00 pm on June 27, 2024 | Webinar
Live from the Arctic: Unlocking Earth's Environmental History
| The ice sheets near the Earth’s poles contain ancient ice formed from continuous snow accumulation over thousands of years. Using ice cores, scientists can study the old air trapped in the ice, which unlocks mysteries of Earth’s environmental history. Researchers from the University of California Irvine present this webinar from NSF Summit Station, Greenland as they study historical changes in atmospheric levels of hydrogen using a newly drilled ice core from the Greenland ice cap. Because of the unique challenges posed by hydrogen’s small molecular size, the researchers are bringing their instruments to Greenland to analyze samples as soon as they are retrieved! | |
October 17-19, 2024 | Reykjavík, Iceland
2024 Arctic Circle Assembly
| Arctic Circle is the largest network of international dialogue and cooperation on the future of the Arctic and our Planet. It is an open democratic platform with participation from governments, organizations, corporations, universities, think tanks, environmental associations, indigenous communities, concerned citizens, and others. It is nonprofit and nonpartisan. | |
December 9-12, 2024 | Ottawa, Ontario Canada
ArcticNet’s Arctic Change 2024
| Arctic Circle is the largest network of international dialogue and cooperation on the future of the Arctic and our Planet. It is an open democratic platform with participation from governments, organizations, corporations, universities, think tanks, environmental associations, indigenous communities, concerned citizens, and others. It is nonprofit and nonpartisan. | |
December 9-13, 2024 | Washington, DC USA
AGU24: What’s Next for Science
| Each year, AGU’s annual meeting, the largest gathering of Earth and space scientists, convenes 25,000+ attendees from 100+ countries to share research and connect with friends and colleagues. Scientists, educators, policymakers, journalists and communicators attend AGU24 to better understand our planet and environment, opening pathways to discovery, opening greater awareness to address climate change, opening greater collaborations to lead to solutions and opening the fields and professions of science to a whole new age of justice equity, diversity, inclusion and belonging. | |
NEW THIS WEEK | January 27-30, 2025 | Tromsø, Norway and virtual
Arctic Frontiers 2025: Beyond Borders
| The challenges of today go beyond deadlines decided by governments, territorial claims of oceans and lands, or borders drawn on a map. Addressing global issues requires collaborative efforts and swift decision-making. Dismantling the barriers between science, business, and policy is necessary to deepen communication and enhance our understanding of the pan-Arctic ecosystem. Modern challenges, such as the impacts of climate change, fostering sustainable development, and navigating political tensions, are deeply interconnected. Whilst the financial, societal, and environmental costs of the green transition will not be fairly distributed worldwide, the Arctic is part of the solution. | |
January 27-31, 2025 | Anchorage, Alaska USA
Alaska Marine Science Symposium
| The Alaska Marine Science Symposium (AMSS), Alaska’s premier marine research conference, has been bringing together scientists, educators, resource managers, students, and interested public for over twenty years to discuss the latest marine research being conducted in Alaskan waters. Over 700 people attend this conference held annually during the month of January. Each day of the conference highlights important Alaskan marine ecosystems: Gulf of Alaska (Tuesday), Arctic (Wednesday), and the Bering Sea & Aleutian Islands (Thursday). Research topics discussed range from ocean physics, fishes and invertebrates, seabirds, marine mammals, to local traditional knowledge. Since its inception, NPRB has been a proud sponsor and one of the leading organizers of AMSS. | |
March 20-28, 2025 | Boulder, Colorado USA
4th International Conference on Arctic Research Planning (ICARP IV)
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In lead up to its 35th anniversary in 2025, the International Arctic Science Committee (IASC) is coordinating a multi-year planning process for the Fourth International Conference on Arctic Research Planning (ICARP IV) that will engage Arctic researchers, policymakers, residents, and stakeholders from around the world to collegially discuss the state of Arctic science, the place the Arctic occupies in global affairs and systems, to consider the most urgent knowledge gaps and research priorities that lie before us and to explore avenues to address these research needs. This event is hosted by a consortium of US institutions, including the University of Colorado Boulder, University of Northern Iowa, University of Alaska Fairbanks, and Alaska Pacific University. ICARP I, II, and III focused the attention of the world’s researchers toward the value of strategic international coordination in accelerating progress in addressing critical challenges. ICARP IV will build upon this concept by striving to achieve consensus and build collaborations among the leading scientific, academic, environmental, Indigenous and political organizations currently concerned with Arctic issues.
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