Link to the BELSPO website NL FR DE EN Contact Help Search Links

International Polar Year

Belgium’s contribution to The International Polar Year (IPY 2007/2008)

1. What is the IPY 2007/2008?
2. Why a focus in the pole areas?
3. How is the IPY organised?
4. Belgium’s participation
5. Belgian Youth Steering Committee
6. Links to complementary resources

1. What is the IPY 2007/2008?

1 March was the launch of the fourth International Polar Year (IPY 2007/2008) an initiative of the International Council for Science (ICSU) officially lasting from 1 March 2007 up to 1 March 2009 and including 2 Arctic and 2 Antarctic summers.
This 4th edition of the IPY was proceeded by two International Polar Years (1882/1883 and 1932/1933) and the International Geophysical Year (IGY, 1958), where an intensive burst of internationally coordinated, interdisciplinary, scientific research and observations focused on the earth’s high latitudes was created.
This 4th IPY is the largest and most ambitious international effort to develop research at and around both poles to investigate the impact of polar processes on the global environment. Results should be used to secure a sustainable development of the polar regions in a changing climate.

2. Why a focus in the pole areas?

The white surfaces and the cold water circulation of the poles form a key role in the global climate system of our planet; the pole regions are also our early warning systems for climate change; and the ice archives earth’s climate trough geological time scales.
However we still remain remarkably ignorant of many aspects of how polar climate operates and its interaction with polar environments, ecosystems and societies. In order to better understand the current global climate and what might happen in future the science community needs a better picture of conditions at the poles and how they interact with and influence the oceans, atmosphere and land masses. An IPY in 2007-2008 also affords an opportunity to engage the upcoming generation of young Earth System scientists and to get the public to realise just how much the poles do influence us.
The International Polar Year (IPY) 2007-2008, hence, provides a unique opportunity to bring research and science centres together to promote polar science.

3. How is this IPY organised?

The entire polar community at individual, national and international level (from research institutes, schools, public organisations,..) was invited to create project proposals for activities during the IPY. A very large number Expressions of Intents (EoI’s) (870+) were thus submitted and assessed. Most proposals were endorsed and linked to six IPY themes.

4. Belgium’s participation

After an initial submission of ideas channelled through our National Committee (Prof Hugo Decleir, Dr Annick Wilmotte, Celine Dessaucy), 33 proposals with Belgian involvement were Endorsed:

Projects with Belgian lead:

ID 83

SCAR-MarBIN: the information dimension of Antarctic Marine Biodiversity
ID 191 The Sixth Continent Initiative - Capacity Building in Antarctic Scientific Research

Projects with Belgian involvement:

ID 22 POLARSTERN expedition “HERMES - the Nordic margin” in the framework of the EU funded Integrated Project HERMES (Hotspot Ecosystem Research on the Margins of European Seas)
ID 28 Climate of the Arctic and its role for Europe/Arctic System Reanalysis
ID 32 POLar study using Aircraft, Remote sensing, surface measurements and modelling of Climate, chemistry, Aerosols and Transport (POLARCAT)
ID 34 Impact of CLImate induced glacial melting on marine and terrestric COastal communities on a gradient along the Western Antarctic PENinsula
ID 35 International Polar Year GEOTRACES: An international study of the biogeochemical cycles of Trace Elements and Isotopes in the Arctic and Southern Oceans
ID 40 Developing Arctic Modelling and Observing Capabilities for Long-term Environmental Studies
ID 42 Subglacial Antarctic Lake Environments – Unified International Team for Exploration and Discovery
ID 53 A Census of Antarctic Marine Life
ID 54 Antarctic Climate Evolution
ID 55 Microbiological and Ecological Responses to Global Environmental Changes in Polar Regions (MERGE)
ID 59 Terrestrial ecosystems in ARctic and ANTarctic: Effects of UV Light, Liquefying ice, and Ascending temperatures
ID 66 ANDEEP – SYSTCO (ANtarctic benthic DEEP-sea biodiversity: colonisation history and recent community patterns – SYSTem COupling)
ID 72 Network for ARCtic Climate and Biological DIVersity Studies
ID 92 Integrated analyses of circumpolar Climate interactions and Ecosystem Dynamics in the Southern Ocean–International Polar Year
ID 99 Ozone layer and UV radiation in a changing climate evaluated during IPY
ID 107 IPY in the Antarctic Peninsula – Ice and Climate [The APY, APICS, GLABENAP, and TRAPIS Expressions of Intent]
ID 118 The Greenland Ice Sheet – Stability, History and Evolution
ID 121 Improved numerical weather forecasting and climate simulations by exploitation of in-situ, airborne remote-sensing and satellite data, advanced modelling systems and basic research into polar processes and into polar-global interactions.
ID 124 Astronomy from the Polar Plateaus
ID 132 Climate of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean – Ocean Circulation Cluster
ID 137 Evolution and Biodiversity in the Antarctic: the Response of Life to Change
ID 141 Antarctic Sea Ice in International Polar Year
ID 151 Present day processes, Past changes, and Spatiotemporal variability of biotic, abiotic and socio-environmental conditions and resource components along and across the Arctic delimitation zone. (PPS Arctic)
ID 168 International Polar Year Youth Steering Committee (IPY YSC)
ID 185 Polar Earth Observing Network
ID 213 Environmental baselines, processes, changes and Impacts on people in sub-arctic Sweden and the Nordic Arctic Regions (ENVISNAR)
ID 214 Retrospective and Prospective Vegetation Change in the Polar Regions: Back to the Future
ID 267 Comprehensive Meteorological dataset of active IPY Antarctic measurement phase for Scientific and applied Studies
ID 328 Integrated Communication, Education and Evaluation
ID 339 Measurement and Attribution of recent Greenland Ice sheet chaNgeS (MARGINS)
ID 343 Students on Ice - IPY Youth Expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic
ID 385 Towards an international astronomical observatory at Dome C in Antarctica
ID 391 BIANZO2: Biodiversity of three representative groups of Antarctic Zoobenthos
ID 417 Integrated analyses of circumpolar Climate interactions and Ecosystem Dynamics in the Southern Ocean-International Polar Year
ID 455 IGLO (International action on GLObal warming).
ID 459 IceCube South Pole Neutrino Observatory

5. Belgian Youth Steering Committee

The International Polar Year Youth Steering Committee (IPY-YSC) was recently created in the framework of IPY 2007-2008, aiming at involving young researchers and youth from different backgrounds in the IPY program. It is meant as a global effort to focus research attention and public interest on the world’s Polar Regions and the issues facing these areas. This YSC consists of representatives of different countries (e.g., Belgium, Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Portugal, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, United States), which are responsible for providing the link between the International YSC and their own National Youth Steering Committees.

The Belgian YSC, for which a call for participation was posted on the Belgian Polar Platform aims at forming a network of young polar researchers, providing a background for future collaborations, and creating opportunities to share their work with a broader public. Together with people from other backgrounds (artists, students, teachers) they will try to reach especially those who don’t easily get in touch with (polar) science. The Belgian YSC had its first meeting on 08-06-06, in which these aims and potential activities were discussed. Possible activities to focus on are e.g., the organization of a polar competition and exhibition on polar issues (both scientific and artistic), combined with a popularizing scientific conference. The Belgian YSC keeps with regular intervals in contact with the International YSC via audio meetings to discuss (inter)national efforts and actions.

Collaboration with BE-POLES, the International Polar Foundation (IPF) and Jeugd, Cultuur en Wetenschap (Flemish organization that aims at promoting science to the youth, JCW will be an additive to this stimulating project.

People interested in joining the YSC are still welcome. Contact info: mieke.sterken@UGent.be

6. Links to complementary resources

- A list of all proposals where Belgium is mentioned as participating country is extracted from the IPY website.
- IPY presentation of Prof. Em. Hugo Decleir during the BE-POLES workshop.
- Paper about IPY and polar researchers in Liège
[16-02-2007].
- First SCAR-MarBIN Newsletter released
[24-10-2006]
- Call for IPY- titles at the Congrès-des-Sciences 2007
[17-10-2006]
- Summer update on IPY
[28-09-2006]
- Call for participation in The International Polar Year Youth Steering Committee
[07-2006]


 
Belgium.be