#1 out of 1
science14h ago
Arctic scientists 'feel pretty uncomfortable' on Greenland
- Geopolitical tensions are hindering Arctic science collaboration, threatening decades of joint research in Greenland and the Arctic.
- Russia’s war on Ukraine has disrupted INTERACT, an Arctic-wide program that linked researchers across eight Arctic countries.
- EU funding initially enabled travel and data exchange between European and Russian scientists before restrictions tightened in 2022.
- Experts warn that removing Russian stations from Arctic research data leaves a knowledge gap about the region's conditions.
- Science diplomacy is highlighted as a potential way to ease tensions and foster cooperation in the Arctic.
- Arctic research is crucial for understanding climate change, ice sheet dynamics, and Indigenous peoples’ wellbeing.
- Greenland’s ice sheet acts as a climate crisis indicator and could influence global sea levels if it melts completely.
- Arctic research has yielded major discoveries, including the York meteorite and magnetic field dating.
- Experts warn that climate change and geopolitical frictions threaten ongoing Arctic research collaboration.
- The Arctic is described as both a potential global conflict zone and a platform for peace through collaboration.
Vote 0
