Leading international scientists boost new polar research centre

Four top scientists from the US, the UK, Belgium and Norway will join Centre for ice, Cryosphere, Carbon and Climate (iC3) to discover how the links between ice sheets, carbon cycles and ocean ecosystems will impact life on earth.

A glacier meeting a fjord. Sharp mountains in the background
A glacier meets the Magdalene fjord at Spitsbergen, Norway Photo: Jørn Berger-Nyvoll / UiT
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Rydland, Kjetil kjetil.rydland@uit.no Kommunikasjonsrådgjevar
Published: 08.12.23 11:17 Updated: 08.12.23 11:52
Arctic Ocean Climate About UiT

Four top scientists from the United States, the United Kingdom, Belgium and Norway have agreed to join the new Centre for ice, Cryosphere, Carbon and Climate (iC3) in Tromsø in adjunct positions (20%), boosting its efforts to discover how the links between ice sheets, carbon cycles and ocean ecosystems will impact life on earth.

– Right now, nobody knows how much carbon is stored beneath the world’s polar ice sheets, how much of will be released as the ice melts, and how that is going to affect global climate and life in the oceans. Solving this urgent puzzle requires collaboration between scientists from many different disciplines , so I'm delighted that four world-class scientists are joining our team, Dr Monica Winsborrow, iC3 Assistant Director, says.

This is a vote of confidence into iC3 as a global hub of excellence in polar research.

iC3’s four new team members bring essential skills needed to tackle the biggest questions in polar science. They will contribute expertise in glacier biogeochemistry (Dr Jon Hawkings, University of Pennsylvania), ocean modelling (Dr Fanny Monteiro, University of Bristol), biogeochemical modelling (Professor Sandra Arndt, Free University of Brussels), and ice sheet modelling (Dr Petra Langebroek, NORCE).

A montage of four portreaits of thre women and one man.
The four new team member (from top left): Dr Fanny Monteiro, Dr Jon Hawkings, Dr Petra Langebroek and Professor Sandra Arndt. Photo: Used by permission

– This vote of confidence into iC3 by globally leading scientists builds our reputation as a global hub of excellence in polar research. We look forward to attracting even more top scientific talent to Tromsø over the coming months and years. Dr Terri Souter, iC3 centre manager says.

The iC3 centre, based in Tromsø in northern Norway, on the edge of the Arctic, is a partnership between UiT The Arctic University of Norway, the Norwegian Polar Institute and NORCE.

The Norwegian Research Council recently awarded UiT a ten-year grant of NOK 155,555,000 to establish iC3 as a Norwegian Centre of Excellence for Outstanding Research. The centre will systematically documentinventory the carbon stored within and beneath ice sheets, understand how melting ice sheets will affect these carbon stores and study what impact this will have on sensitive ocean ecosystems and global climate.

Rydland, Kjetil kjetil.rydland@uit.no Kommunikasjonsrådgjevar
Published: 08.12.23 11:17 Updated: 08.12.23 11:52
Arctic Ocean Climate About UiT