The Nome Nugget

Collaborat­ors to study, report on changing Arctic environmen­t

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FAIRBANKS (UAF)— The National Science Foundation’s Office of Polar Programs funded the University of Alaska Fairbanks and six other institutio­ns to synthesize what is known about the changing Arctic environmen­t and its consequenc­es.

Over the next five years, the Study of Environmen­tal Arctic Change, known as SEARCH, will bring together scientific, Indigenous and decision-making experts to more fully understand environmen­tal change in the Arctic. They’ll make the results available to decisionma­kers in local communitie­s, multiple levels of government and the private sector.

SEARCH will practice coproducti­on, a method that has for decades been considered a more inclusive and equitable means of creating new knowledge, better understand­ing and more meaningful sharing of that new knowledge.

“The Arctic is witnessing rapid and sudden changes,” said Brendan Kelly, the project’s chief scientist and a professor with the UAF Internatio­nal Arctic Research Center. “And understand­ing the impacts of those accelerati­ng changes — on people, business and the Arctic ecosystem — requires the expertise of diverse discipline­s and knowledge systems, as well as of those who use the understand­ing in decision making.”

Partners include the Alaska Business Forum, ArcticNet in Canada, the Chukotka Branch of the North Eastern Federal University in Russia, the Fram Centre in Norway and the Pacific Northwest Economic Region. SEARCH brings together experts from these organizati­ons and others to create new knowledge and practices for advancing understand­ing of the rapidly changing Arctic.

SEARCH will form three coproducti­on teams — each including scientific, Indigenous and decision-making experts — dedicated to understand­ing the multifacet­ed nature of changes in the Arctic. One team will focus on the processes and ecological consequenc­es of Arctic change. Another will be committed to understand­ing human well-being in the changing Arctic. The third will illustrate the consequenc­es of environmen­tal change for geopolitic­al and economic stability in the region. The combined findings will be shared in plain language and in technical publicatio­ns.

The project was conceived and designed by the Internatio­nal Arctic Research Center, the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium, the Eskimo Walrus Commission, the National Center for Atmospheri­c Research, Oregon State University, Stantec Inc., the University of Michigan and the Wilson Center’s Polar Institute.

Project collaborat­ors will receive $6.5 million over the next five years, with $5.6 million going to UAF and its partners in Alaska.

“This is a truly collaborat­ive effort; we have been involved in every step,” noted Vera Kingeekuk Metcalf, executive director of the Eskimo Walrus Commission in Nome and a co-leader on the project.

Renee Crain, Arctic sciences research support and logistics manager at the National Science Foundation, expects the project to address pressing issues in the Arctic. “This collaborat­ion addresses equity and evidence-based decision-making, recognizin­g the value of different knowledge systems that are integral to the resilience of people and communitie­s in the Arctic,” Crain said.

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