Arctic Science Ministerial in Washington this week

Mark Brzezinski, Former US ambassador to Sweden, now head of the White House’s Arctic Executive Steering Committee. (Photo: Berit Enge)
On Wednesday, science ministers from 25 countries will meet at the White House for the first-ever Arctic Science Ministerial. High North News spoke with the man in charge of putting on an event that is as urgent as it is complicated: "It’s like planning 20 weddings simultaneously."

On Wednesday, science ministers from 25 countries will meet at the White House for the first-ever Arctic Science Ministerial. High North News spoke with the man in charge of putting on an event that is as urgent as it is complicated: "It’s like planning 20 weddings simultaneously."

Norwegian version here.

Nearly a year after visiting Alaska, President Obama will meet with science ministers from 25 countries on September 28 to discuss how to strengthen science and research cooperation in the Arctic.

The goal of the Arctic Science Ministerial is to get countries with significant research interests in the region to commit to more collaboration, as well as to agree to commitments that will last well after the next president takes office.

"The Arctic is warming faster than anywhere else on earth. This has profound consequences not only in the North. We have underestimated the acceleration of these changes. They will impact not only the region, but every person on Earth. That is why we are having this meeting," says Mark Brzezinski, a former US ambassador to Sweden.

Now the head of the White House’s Arctic Executive Steering Committee, a position created in 2015, Brzezinski has had responsibility for planning the event. It has been a very busy few weeks.

"I have never ever worked as hard as this. This is like planning 20 weddings simultaneously," he laughs.

Like last year’s GLACIER meeting, the event on Wednesday is not an Arctic Council event, though there is significant overlap between the organization’s membership and the list of invitees.
The summit will be attended by high-level representatives from the eight Arctic Council member states, and from countries like China, India, UK, France, Germany, Japan and Italy. The European Commission will participate, as will a number of indigenous leaders, with whom the White House has had a series of consultations over the past few months.

"Participation is based on how active the countries’ Arctic research programs are," Brzezinski says. "We are looking for government-to-government alignments in order to advance Arctic research collectively. We need a more detailed and nuanced understanding of what’s happening and what to expect in the future, and we need to better understand how to incorporate indigenous knowledge in order to improve our collective research."

To do that, the White House has identified four themes for the meeting:
  1. Understanding Arctic science challenges and their regional and global implications
  2. Strengthening and integrating Arctic observations and data sharing
  3. Applying expanded scientific understanding of the Arctic to build regional resilience and shape global responses
  4. Using Arctic science as a vehicle for science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) education and citizen empowerment
"These are areas where all nations have a stake," Brzezinski says. "Fortunately we see rapidly emerging technology which provides us with new data and insights. This gives us new opportunities to cooperate. But time is not on our side. We have to rush to observe a system that is changing faster than ever before. We need to look at what is most urgent, and the consequences of inaction."

Wedding comparisons notwithstanding, Brzezinski does not expect the mood at the White House on Wednesday to be one of celebration.

 "This is a meeting of necessity and urgency. We owe it to future generations to rise to this challenge."

 

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