APECS International Online Conference 2022
APECS International Online Conference 2022: All hands on deck!
Inclusive knowledge on polar regions as a pathway for sustainable future
The idiom “All hands on deck” reflects the efforts that are currently needed to address the major environmental challenges of the current century. Knowledge in all forms and of all natures represent an essential component for designing a desirable and sustainable future both for Mankind and the Earth, along with the means to achieve such horizons. Knowledge inclusiveness, however, has not always been a concern in scientific and academic circles, although this could improve the ways we do research and interact with the rest of the society.
For the 2022 edition of its International Online Conference, the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists (APECS) has thus chosen to dedicate a 24-hour online conference, on 18 May 2022, for sharing experiences and knowledge on Polar and Alpine regions from various perspectives.
The conference contains five sessions drawing on multiple disciplines from the social to the natural sciences:
- Polar regions in motion
- Advances in cryospheric sciences
- Voices from Alpine and Polar regions
- Methods and ethics in polar research
- Bridging knowledge from Polar ocean beneficiaries
We decided to make natural, humanities and social sciences meet in three of the five sessions (i.e., bridging knowledge from Polar ocean beneficiaries; polar regions in motion; methods and ethics in polar research) and retained transversal, open themes so as to allow a wide array of discussions. We also dedicated sessions to particular realms such as the ocean, the coasts and the cryosphere.
The APECS International Online Conference 2022 is proud to be an Ocean Decade endorsed activity.
Sessions
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Opening (06:00-06:05 GMT)
Sarah Strand (APECS International Directorate) - Address by Chief Guest - APECS Executive Director
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1 - Polar regions in motion (06:05-09:00 GMT)
Co-chaired by Nicolas Champollion and Vivek Kumar
Polar regions are known to be both fragile environmental and social ecosystems, and areas where climate change is amplified. In addition, some natural components of those regions are crucial for the Earth climate system and its evolution. Since a few decades, important changes at various scales have been observed in the biosphere, the cryosphere, the atmosphere, the ocean but also in human societies. In this context, this transdisciplinary session investigates the environmental changes in polar regions, their impacts and consequences, and to what extent humans themselves contribute to these changes. It seeks a better understanding of the impact of human activities on Polar regions (e.g, increased tourism, resources exploitation, transport, urbanization) in the age of the Anthropocene and how human societies respond to this changing world. Sustainable approaches to adapt or mitigate climate change in polar regions are encouraged.
Keynote speaker:
Chandan Sarangi (Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India) - Impact of light absorbing particles on snow albedo and regional climateSub-topic: How human activities modify their environment, and conversely environmental change affects global health?
Ana Stella Ebbersmeyer (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) - Arctic shipping and the regulation of black carbon
Iulia I. Nita (National Committee of Antarctic Research/Romanian Academy, Romania) - Melting of polar ice: A threat for human health
Hayat Nasirova (Germany) - CryosLOSS (Artwork)
Lina Madaj (The Netherlands) - Mindfulness Coffee Break with APECS Mental Health Resources Project GroupSub-topic: Natural processes
Saule Akhmetkaliyeva (Manchester Metropolitan University, United-Kingdom) - Quantifying and characterizing organic carbon in newly-developed soils following glacier retreat in northern latitudes
Mikhail Latonin (Saint Petersburg State University, Russia) - Dipole pattern of meridional atmospheric internal energy transport across the Arctic gate
Dmitry Nowhisky (Russia) - Traveling around White Sea (Artwork)
Nazlı Baris (Turkey) - Investigation of Researches on Invasive Species Identified in Antarctica by Document Analysis -
2 - Advances in cryospheric sciences (09:30-12:30 GMT)
Co-chaired by Divyesh Varade and Nicolas Champollion
This session aims to understand the natural processes of the cryosphere: solid precipitation, permafrost, glaciers, ice caps and ice sheets, snow, and sea, river and lake-ice. It invites submissions drawing on a variety of techniques and engineering, and from all cryospheric-related fields of natural sciences. Dedicated to advances in the study of the cryosphere, this session aims to enlarge the scope of snow and ice by multidisciplinary works that attempt to document complex interactions between the cryosphere and other components of the Earth system. Snow research is for example a place for multidisciplinary collaborations and innovations. As recently shown, the snowpack constitutes a significant driver of change in terrestrial ecosystems so presentations that attempt to build bridges with disciplines outside the cryospheric sciences are also appreciated. Finally, approaches that include remote sensing techniques, lab experiments, fieldwork and modeling are encouraged.
Sub-topic: Glacier evolution
Aleksandra Osika (University of Silesia, Poland) - Fluctuations of Hansbreen (Hornsund, Svalbard) in the Holocene
Ruby Panwar (Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India) - Glacier Zones Classification using Multi-temporal Sentinel-1 SAR Data
Sara Pasqualetto (Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany) and Sergi González-Herrero (Spanish Meteorological Agency, Spain) - Stations & Stripes (Artwork)
Mikis van Boeckel (NGU, Norway) - Segla (Artwork)Sub-topic: Remote Sensing of glaciers and snow
Surendar Manickam (Vellore Institute of Technology, India) - Microwave remote sensing of snow
Hemant Singh (Indian Institute of Technology, Jammu, India) - Snow cover Variability to climate change in Hindu Kush Himalayas Using Google Earth engine
Kamil Kachniarz (University of Silesia, Poland) - Thermal structure of Hansbreen (S Spitsbergen) in 2007-2021 based on repeated radio echo soundingSub-topic: Periglacial processes
Katarzyna Stachniak (University of Silesia, Poland) - How to catch and recognise a groundwater drainage system in a glacier’s forefield? – hydrogeological modeling as a tool for exploring hard-to-reach Arctic regionsKeynote speaker:
Dr. Chris Derksen (Climate Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada) - Assessment of a changing cryosphere in the IPCC Sixth Assessment cycle -
3 - Voices from Alpine and Polar regions (13:00-16:30 GMT)
Co-chaired by Sophie A. Duveau and Nicolas Champollion
The purpose of this session is twofold. First, it showcases the daily lives of people through perceptions and ways of inhabiting the environment whilst also exploring knowledge, practices and places of indigenous groups. This session also invites submissions that document any form of life experiences and trajectories of individuals or social groups who live, work and visit the polar regions, on various temporalities, whatever their statuses and social milieu. Second, this session interrogates the place of people in the global world taking, for instance, the perspectives of geopolitics, economics, mass media and cultural products. One specific example of topics includes the imaginaries and narratives on Polar and Alpine regions. Submissions from researchers in the social sciences, humanities and arts as well as residents of Polar regions that combine various scales of analysis and attempt to join the Local and the Global are highly encouraged.
Sub-topic: Post-colonial and ecofeminist views
Laetitia Marc (Université Laval, Canada) - The Environmental Engagement of Indigenous Women of the Circumpolar North: The Case of Inuit and Sámi Women
Tatiana Batova (Arctic design lab, Russia) - Fish Fur (Artwork)Keynote speaker:
Dr. Igor Krupnik (Smithsonian Institution, USA) - Partners in Knowledge. What are we learning from Arctic communities for our common sustainable future?Sub-topic: Narratives and imaginaries
Anastasia Deyko (Peru) - Connecting Polar Art and Science with the APECS Art PG
Anastasia Deyko (Peru) - One Arctic-Thousand Cameras: International collaboration of creative youth to archive changes in the Arctic
Mindy Jewell Price (UC Berkeley, USA) - Agriculture in motion. Lifecycles of the North-West Territories agricultural frontierSub-topic: Living in the Arctic: Trajectories from Greenland and Svalbard
Patrycja Nowosad (Poland) - In the Arctic (Artwork)
Rósa Sigrún Jónsdóttir (Iceland) - Modern Life (Artwork)
Round table chaired by Sophie A. Duveau 'What is it like to be remote?' with P. Nowosad and R. S. JónsdóttirSub-topic: Inverted Perspectives
Mohit Phulara (University of Silesia, Poland) - Experiences from living in the Polar regions
Mariama Dryak (PSECCO, USA) - PSECCO: A New Community Office for Supporting Early Career Scientists and Advancing Equity and Inclusion in the Polar Sciences
Discussion animated by Nicolas Champollion 'Inclusion in the polar sciences, what does it mean?' with M. Phulra and M. Dryak -
4 - Methods and ethics in polar research (17:00-19:30 GMT)
Co-chaired by Akin Kuye, Divyesh Varade and Sophie Duveau
This transdisciplinary session sheds light on innovative and alternative ways to do polar research. Studying either natural processes or social phenomena in the Polar regions can be challenging and can lead to the development of novel approaches such as those that combine in-situ and remote sensing data. Drawing on collective feedback, reflections and fieldwork experiences, this session addresses methodological and ethical problems that can be encountered by researchers from multiple disciplines at all stages of the scientific process. As examples, the delimitation of field sites are of particular interest, especially for some research areas that seek for special conditions (e.g, clean sky in astrophysics), as well as the scales of analysis. Submissions on the societal and the environmental impact of polar research are also welcome so as to enrich the methodological discussions. This session will thus explore how interdisciplinarity, instrument development and methodologies can shape sustainable ways of conducting research.
Keynote speaker:
Dr. Kim Holmen (Norwegian Polar Institute and UiT) - Can we make sustainability research sustainable?Sub-topic: Know-How in the Natural and Social Sciences
Ícaro Souza Vieira (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Brazil) - Brazil in the Cryosphere: A bibliometric-spatial study of Brazilian pedological research in Antarctica
Barbara Olga Horyn (University of Iceland) - When the guide becomes the researcher, and the community becomes the guide for the researchSub-topic: Remote Sensing Applications
Adeeb Hashim (Manipal Institute of Technology, India) - Deep Learning Methods for Mapping Glacier Facies in Svalbard
William Harcourt (University of St Andrews, United-Kingdom) - Development of the APECS Polar Remote Sensing DatabaseSub-topic: Stories of Ethics in Polar Research
Nicolas Champollion (Institut des Géosciences de l’Environnement, France) - Initiatives to imagine sustainable low-carbon research: should we continue performing field missions in polar regions?
Jumanah Hamdi (Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, USA) - New Beginnings and Bringing Green Chemistry to the Arctic -
5 - Bridging knowledge from Polar ocean beneficiaries (19:45 GMT-22:00 GMT)
Co-chaired by Daniela Walch and Gwenaëlle Gremion
Polar oceans are of great importance for the Earth system and humans, but remain largely unknown to us. In light of the UN ocean decade, this session aims to gather speakers willing to explore the multiple facets of the polar oceans and coastal regions, thereby contributing to our understanding of physical properties and dynamics of the ocean, marine ecosystem functioning and investigating the anthropogenic nature of changes to the oceans and coasts of the polar regions, as, for instance, pollution and climate change effects. This transdisciplinary session welcomes studies and oral accounts from a variety of Ocean beneficiaries that depend on the same - not only for their research but also for their living and other ocean-related activities. Submissions that draw on the notion of “marine resources” and provide insights on livelihoods, ocean-related conflicts and tensions as well as governance are also encouraged.
Sub-topic: Physical processes
Chloe Nunn (IOC-UNESCO) - The UN Ocean Decade - an Introduction
Emma White - Ocean Circulation and Ice Shelf Melting in the Bellingshausen Sea, AntarcticaKeynote speaker:
Irene Schloss (CONICET, Argentina) - Marine plankton stories in high-latitude ecosystemsSub-topic: Ocean governance in Arctic and Antarctica
Marco Volpe (University of Lapland, Finland) - The Northern Sea Route within the Sino-Russian alignment framework in the Arctic
Caspar de Gelmini (Germany) - Life in the Future (Artwork)Sub-topic: Marine ecosystems and biology
Florea Andra (Université du Québec à Rimouski, Canada) - Biological characterization of Icelandic scallops (Chlamys islandica) and modeling of their occurrence using Inuit traditional knowledge in the Belcher Islands, Nunavut -
Closing (22:10-22:20 GMT)
Co-chaired by Daniela Walch and Gwenaëlle Gremion
Tatiana Poplevina (Russia) - Venets (Artwork)
Daniela Walch - Address for Awards and Awardees
Scientific & Organizing Committees
Scientific Committee
Tesfaye BERHANU, Picarro Inc, Switzerland
Nicolas CHAMPOLLION, Institut des Géosciences de l’Environnement, France
Tommy CLAY, University of California, United States
Sophie DUVEAU, Centre Alexandre Koyré, EHESS, France and Svalbard
Gwenaëlle GREMION, Institut des Sciences de la Mer, Université du Québec à Rimouski, Canada
Caroline HERVÉ, Université Laval, Canada
Gestur HOVGAARD, Roskilde University, Denmark
Simon JUNGBLUT, Bremen University, Germany
Vivek KUMAR, North-Eastern Hill University, India
Dariusz IGNATIUK, University of Silesia, Poland
Timo KOIVUROVA, Arctic Centre, University of Lapland, Finland
Lennart NILSEN, University of Tromsø, Norway
Frank PATTYN, Laboratoire de glaciologie, Université libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Archita RANA, Indian Institute of Science Education and Research Kolkata, India
Andréi ROGATCHEVSKI, University of Tromsø, Norway
Katie SIPES, Aarhus University, Denmark
Peter SKÖLD, Arctic Council & Umeå University, Sweden
Carla TAPIA BALDIS, Institute of Nivology, Glaciology and Environmental Sciences, CONICET, Argentina
Divyesh VARADE, Indian Institute of Technology, India
Daniela WALCH, Université du Québec à Rimouski, Canada
Organizing Committee
Nicolas Champollion, Sophie Duveau, Joana Fragão, Gwenaëlle Gremion, Ljuba Günther, Anika Happe, Kirsi Keskitalo, Vivek Kumar, Akin Kuye, Prashant Pandit, Geetha Plackal, Carla Tapia Baldis, Ashishkumar Upadhyay, Divyesh Varade, Deniz Vural, Daniela Walch, Dhanendra Singh.
With the participation of APECS Art project group.
Committee members are listed in alphabetical order.