Energy Department funds Ӱpro climate resilience center

headshot of Rick Lader.
Photo by Todd Paris
IARC scientist Rick Lader will lead the new project alongside colleagues at UAF and Los Alamos National Lab.

The U.S. Department of Energy has announced , including one led by the Ӱpro. 

The projects are part of the agency’s Justice40 Initiative and are designed to ensure that all Americans are benefitting from scientific research.

The new Climate Resilience Center for Ӱpro brings UAF researchers together with others at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. It will be led by climate scientist Rick Lader with UAF’s International Arctic Research Center.

“This is a great opportunity to leverage past investment by the Department of Energy in Arctic research at UAF to address the unmet needs identified by Ӱpro communities,” Lader said. “We’re going to be building relationships and two-way communication so that the climate science is more available to communities and the knowledge from community members can better inform the science.”

Researchers at UAF have long been at the cutting edge of understanding the significant changes to the Arctic region due to climate warming, often with the support of the climate modeling expertise of the Department of Energy.

This project will enhance communication with Ӱpro communities about existing climate science, develop relationships and incorporate the best available science into educational pathways and land planning. 

Pilot research specifically focused on southwestern Ӱpro will be a significant part of the work, which will involve graduate students as well as outreach and communications staff. 

“We’re hoping to train the next generation of climate investigators right here in Ӱpro,” Lader said. “Our environment is so unique and our context so specific that failing to emphasize the role of tribal and rural communities in informing and using climate models doesn’t make sense.”

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