Tag: climate research

  • Post-doctoral position available

    Post-doctoral position available

    research site

    A Post-doctoral position on high-latitude land surface modelling within the Department of Applied Environmental Science (ITM) and the Bolin Centre for Climate Research is open for applications. The deadline is the 3rd of September.

    The main focus of the work will be on including near-surface vegetation functions into the terrestrial ecosystem model JSBACH. Two aspects are important: The representation of plant physiological processes being responsible for the vegetation distribution as well as hydrological processes in the moss layer which have impacts on the soil hydrological and thermal regime.

    Field observations (e.g. physical properties and carbon profile data, eddy covariance heat and carbon fluxes) and large-scale observational datasets (e.g. remote sensing products, atmospheric inversion of trace gas fluxes) will be important for a calibration and validation of the model. Then, such new modelling tool can be used to investigate past, current and future ecosystem functions in relation to environmental change.

    This is a full-time, initial 1-year position with the possibility of one year extension. The expected starting date is after agreement.

    More information available here.

  • Climate research in Norway at final stage

    Climate research in Norway at final stage

    A rocky coast in Svalbard

    A huge project in Norway enters its final year in January. The NORKLIMA project, The Research Council of Norway’s 10-year Large-scale programme on Climate Change and its Impacts in Norway, is entering its final stages.

    Continued activities for climate change research in Norway are under way.

    “Now we want to hear the thoughts of the various national and international stakeholders regarding future needs for knowledge about climate issues,” says Camilla Schreiner, Director of the Department for Climate and Polar Research at the Research Council.

    In cooperation with Norway’s universities, the Research Council is hosting dialogue meetings around the country to gather input and viewpoints from research institutions and trade and industry. In addition, a separate dialogue meeting with relevant ministries, agencies and administrative bodies will be held.

    The institute wants to do a thorough overview of the situation before it released its final report in 2013.

    Although this seems to be political rather then scientific, a host of research programs will go on until the summer of 2012.

    “We don’t yet know the future model for Norwegian climate research in the post-NORKLIMA era,” continues Dr Schreiner. “But the objective is clear: its targets and structure will enable Norwegian researchers to make a significant contribution to dealing with climate change effectively – at both the national and the global level.”

    Source: The Research Council of Norway