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September 17, 2014
 

The Administration's Climate Plan: Failure by Design, September 17, 2014 (Washington, D.C.). The House Science, Space and Technology Committee will hold a hearing on the Administration's plan on climate change. Dr. John Holdren, director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Janet McCabe, acting assistant administrator of the Office of Air and Radiation of the US Environmental Protection Agency, are expected to testify.

 

capital Today's Congressional Action:  

The House is expected to consider a short-term authorization of federal funding after September 30, 2014 and non-Arctic legislation. The Senate is expected to consider several nominations.

Media  

 

harry reid Reid Sets Lame-Duck Schedule. The Senate has set the date for returning for the lame-duck session. Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is advising senators they will return for the post-election lame-duck session the day following Veterans Day. Orientation and the Democratic leadership elections for the next Congress will be held Nov. 12 through Nov. 14, according to a notice obtained by CQ Roll Call. Roll Call

  

Job Opportunity: Science Director. The Northwest Arctic Borough has entered into a cooperative grant agreement with industry partners to establish a science division to conduct research in the region. The grant agreement establishes a 15-member Science Steering Committee to provide guidance on the development of the science program. Responsibilities include assisting in all aspects of the design, implementation and management of developing and sustaining a science division with the NAB Planning Department. Establishing a science division will require working with the NAB Science Steering Committee, the Subsistence Mapping Project and other NAB departments and organizations to create an integrated science division. The Northwest Arctic Borough

  

Healy, Coast Guard US Icebreaker Fleet Will Need Makeover by About 2020, Coast Guard Says. The U.S. Coast Guard's fleet of two operating Arctic-class icebreakers will be sufficient -- if barely so -- for about another six years, the new Alaska commandant said Monday. Rear Adm. Daniel Abel, who took over in June as the commandant for the sprawling Alaska district, told the U.S. Arctic Research Commission the Coast Guard can get by with its operating icebreakers, the Healy and the Polar Star. Alaska Dispatch News

  

June Clouds May Mean Low Arctic Sea Ice in September: New Research. When you look up and see high clouds in early summer, the clouds may look pretty. But, in the Arctic, these clouds appear to be linked to less sea ice cover on the Arctic Ocean in September and October, say a group of Korean researchers. They found a connection between that high cloud cover over the Arctic in early summer months and low sea ice in the Arctic Ocean later in the season, according to a new Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres study from the Climate System Laboratory in Seoul, Korea. Nunatsiaq Online

  

beluga Nunavik's New Beluga Management System Promises More Flexibility. Nunavik's new management system for the region's beluga whale hunt should give the region's communities more flexibility in how they harvest, says the Nunavik Marine Region Wildlife Board. While Nunavik's beluga hunting season has generally run from April to November, under the new system announced last week, areas along the Eastern Hudson Bay, the Hudson Strait and Ungava Bay are open to hunting beluga right through until Jan. 31, 2017. Nunatsiaq Online

  

[Opinion] The Russians Are Coming. Is Denmark Ready? The Ukraine conflict has shown us that Russia is not afraid of using a combination of military power, coercion and diplomacy to attain its goals. This should have the Kingdom of Denmark thinking about which strategy to use when dealing with Russia in negotiations over Arctic territorial claims. If Moscow's current behaviour is any indication, Copenhagen will be dealing with a country that, when it comes to competing for territory and influence, is willing to employ tactics that are alien to us in the West. Even though there is currently a fragile truce in eastern Ukraine, the general sentiment is that tensions between the West and Russia cannot be solved through negotiation and mutual understanding. Russia's actions in its near abroad are clearly linked to Moscow's expectation that the EU and NATO will not respond with tougher sanctions or military action. Arctic Journal

 

NASA Air Campaigns Focus on Arctic Climate Impacts. Over the past few decades, average global temperatures have been on the rise, and this warming is happening two to three times faster in the Arctic. As the region's summer comes to a close, NASA is hard at work studying how rising temperatures are affecting the Arctic. NASA researchers this summer and fall are carrying out three Alaska-based airborne research campaigns aimed at measuring greenhouse gas concentrations near Earth's surface, monitoring Alaskan glaciers, and collecting data on Arctic sea ice and clouds. Observations from these NASA campaigns will give researchers a better understanding of how the Arctic is responding to rising temperatures. Phys.org

 

Avian Cholera Kills Fewer Birds in Nunavut, Nunavik. A disease that once ravaged bird populations in the Eastern Arctic is now killing fewer birds in Nunavut and Nunavik. The effects of the deadly bacteria were first observed by Inuit in 2004. Infected birds were dying by the thousands, sometimes within hours of becoming infected. Common eider ducks were hit especially hard. CBC News

Legislative Actionfutureevents  

 

H.J. Res 124, continuing appropriations to fund government operations after September 30, 2014. (Introduced by Representative Harold Rogers and placed on the House Calendar)

Future Events

  

Tweetchat: Preparing for Arctic Oil Spills, September 18, 2014 (Twitter). In August of 2014, NOAA's Office of Response and Restoration sent two GIS specialists aboard the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy for an exercise in the Arctic Ocean demonstrating oil spill tools and technologies. Part of NOAA's focus in the exercise was to test the Arctic Environmental Response Management Application (ERMA®), NOAA's interactive mapping tool for environmental response data, during a simulated oil spill. Learn about NOAA's role in the mission and what life was like aboard an icebreaker. Use Twitter to ask questions directly to NOAA GIS specialists Jill Bodnar and Zachary Winters-Staszak.

 

2014 Week of the Arctic, October 6-11, 2014 (Nome, Kotzebue and Barrow, Alaska, USA). The Institute of the North will host the 2014 Week of the Arctic. The 2014 Week of the Arctic is a platform for community leaders, subject matter experts and interested stakeholders to learn about the Arctic while contributing to a growing list of priorities and perspectives. Presentations, roundtable discussions and workshops will be held in Nome, Kotzebue and Barrow. Throughout the week, presentations and interviews will be captured on video for distribution through social media and web-based sharing.

 

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.

 

Transatlantic Science Week 2014, October 27-28, 2014 (Toronto, Canada). The purpose of the annual Transatlantic Science Week (TSW) is to promote enhanced cooperation between Canadian, American and Norwegian stakeholders in research, innovation and higher education. TSW is an arena where different stakeholders can meet with the purpose of developing long-term collaborations or partnerships. The conference also hopes to strengthen the linkages that currently exist between the research and education domains. Finally, TSW also provides an excellent arena for dialogue between the research communities and policymakers. 


 

Oil Spill Response 25 Years After the Exxon-Valdez and in the Wake of Macondo 252: What have we learned and what are we missing? October 28-29, 2014. (University of New Hampshire). The University of New Hampshire Center for Spills in the Environment and the School of Marine Science and Ocean Engineering will host a forum entitled Oil Spill Response 25 years After the Exxon Valdez and in the Wake of Macondo 252, What Have We Learned and What Are We Missing? Questions to be addressed include: what have we learned from these two spills? How can they inform future spill response? What should we do differently to address the spills of the future? Topics covered will include a) the types of spills that could occur in the future and the challenges they pose for response; b) the improvements needed in communication among responders, scientists, the public and politicians; c) the role of academic science in spill response; and d) the impacts of new scientific methods, such as molecular biology, on impact assessment and restoration. The forum will feature an array of speakers who played key roles during the Exxon Valdez and Deepwater Horizon spills.  After an opening overview of oil spills by Gary Shigenaka, NOAA Office of Response and Restoration, Captain Ed Page, Chief of Coast Guard Operations during the Exxon Valdez oil spill and Dr. Robert Spies, Chief Science Advisor to the Governments on the Exxon Valdez spill will kick off the discussion.  Then Thad Allen, former Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard and Dr. Marcia McNutt, who was director of the U.S. Geological Survey, will present their perspectives on the Deepwater Horizon spill.  Speakers from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, U.S. Arctic Research Commission, U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, National Institutes of Health, the American Petroleum Institute, Ocean Conservancy, and many other experts will offer perspectives on oil spills in the United States. 


 

Arctic Circle, October 31-November 2, 2014 (Reykjavik, 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. 
 

US- Canada Northern Oil and Gas Research Forum, November 4-6, 2014 (Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada). Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Canada and the Canadian Polar Commission in partnership with the U.S. Department of the Interior, are hosting the fourth Canada - United States Northern Oil and Gas Research Forum. The Northern Oil and Gas Research Forum is a biennial meeting with representation from government, industry, academia, Aboriginal groups and Northerners from both Canada and the United States. The Forum provides an opportunity to discuss current and future priorities for northern oil and gas research. The Forum will showcase the value of northern research in support of sound decision-making for oil and gas management.

 

Alaska Policy Commission. November 17-18, 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.

 

Arctic Change 2014, December 8-12, 2014 (Ottawa, Canada). The international Arctic Change 2014 conference aims to stimulate discussion and foster collaborations among people with a vested interest in the Arctic and its peoples. Coinciding with the pinnacle of Canada's chairmanship of the Arctic Council and marking ArcticNet's 10th anniversary, Arctic Change 2014 welcomes researchers, students, Northerners, policy makers, and stakeholders from all fields of Arctic research and all countries to address the numerous environmental, social, economical and political challenges and opportunities that are emerging from climate change and modernization in the Arctic. With over 1000 participants expected to attend, Arctic Change 2014 will be one of the largest trans-sectoral international Arctic research conferences ever held in Canada. 

 

Arctic Frontiers: Climate and Energy, January 18-23, 2015. The earth is in the midst of major climate changes. The Arctic is experiencing the impact of these changes more and faster than other parts of the globe. Processes starting in the Arctic may have deep and profound impacts on other parts of the globe. At the same time the Earth's population is rising and with it the global energy demand. New and greener energy sources are gaining market shares, but still the energy mix of the foreseeable future will have a substantial fossil component. The Arctic is expected to hold major oil and gas resources, while the regions green energy potentials are less explored. The Arctic Frontiers conference is a central arena for discussions of Arctic issues. The conference brings together representatives from science, politics, and civil society to share perspectives on how upcoming challenges in the Arctic may be addressed to ensure sustainable development. Arctic Frontiers is composed of a policy section and a scientific section. 

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