Bjerknessenterets mål er å forstå klima
til nytte for samfunnet.

<  April 2023  >

12.04.2023 14:00 - 12.04.2023 16:00
Allegaten 66, Auditorium B, room A112, first floor or at Zoom

Ocean science seminar - Autonomous landers and their applications for deep-sea research

The Fjord and Coastal Ecology research group is pleased to invite all interested in marine ecology, deep-sea communities, and ocean monitoring to join us for a seminar held by Kevin Hardy (Global Ocean Design), Ashley Nicoll (Stony Brook University) and Natalya Gallo (University of Bergen).

Les mer
14.04.2023 14:00 - 14.04.2023 16:00
Lysverket restaurant

Blue foods for health and sustainability: Talk and Tasting session at Lysverket restaurant

Ticket price: 350,- NOK – link for ticket purchase here.

Limited seats: 30

 

Talk and Tasting session at Lysverket restaurant; the restaurant is housed in KODE art museum Lysverket, overlooking the lake Lille Lungegårdsvann and the surrounding park. Lysverket founder and Michelin star chef Christopher Haatuft presents a three part tasting menu with local “blue foods” in dialouge with Dr. Michelle Tigchelaars talk. 

 

Dr. Michelle Tigchelaar is a research scientist with the Center for Ocean Solutions at Stanford University. As an interdisciplinary climate scientist she focuses on the impacts of climate change on food systems, spanning the aquatic and terrestrial and the ecological and human. At the Center for Ocean Solutions, she coordinates the Blue Food Assessment, an integrative assessment of the role of aquatic foods (food from marine and freshwater systems) in transformations towards healthy, sustainable, just and resilient food systems.

 

Michelle Tigchelaar's research involves developing tools for assessing blue-green climate risk to nutrition and identifying climate impacts and adaptations for food worker health. She is passionate about leveraging scientific findings for positive impact through policy engagement and strategic communication.

 

Christopher Haatuft, Bergen native and founder of the Michelin star Lysverket restaurant. Haatuft is passionate about local ingredients that can be harvested in the fjords along the west coast of Norway. He has also coined the term: “neo-fjordic”. 

 

Welcome to a science talk with a taste of the fjords.

 

Exclusive preview of the exhibition “Ocean Stories” opening the 14th of April 2023 included in ticket.

 

The event is hosted by the project Climate Narratives and is part of One Ocean Week.

14.04.2023 17:00 - 21.04.2023 16:00
KODE, Lysverket, Visningsrom i 1. etasje

Kunst fra Stillehavet, Fiji og Grønland

Lørdag og søndag: kl. 11.00–17.00
Mandag: stengt 
Tirsdag, onsdag, fredag: kl. 11.00–16.00 
Torsdag: kl. 11.00–20.00 

Kunstutstilling på Kode i regi av prosjektet Climate Narratives.

Ocean stories

In conjunction with One Ocean Week in Bergen, the University of Bergen and Kode invites you to an exhibition featuring art from the Pacific Ocean, Fiji and Greenland.

 

Greenland and Fiji are very distant parts of the world, but the people who live there are connected through their proximity to nature, their rich narrative culture, the dependence on natural resources, and the pressure from increasing tourism.

 

At the same time, both places are strongly affected by climate change: ice is melting, and the sea is rising. In Greenland, new land is laid bare while the sea creeps into the tropical islands of the Pacific Ocean.One side of the exhibition will be dedicated to artists from Fiji, the other side will be dedicated to artists from Greenland.

 

The interaction between these two very different geographical locations will be elaborated in artworks, lectures and tours. Researchers and artists from the University of Bergen: the Art Academy (KMD), the Faculty of Social Sciences and the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences who work with climate and sea level.

 

How do the communities along the coast of Greenland and on the low-lying Pacific islands face these changes?

 

In the exhibition “Ocean Stories”, artists from Greenland and Fiji tell the stories. The interaction between these two very different geographical locations is explored through artwork, lectures and conversations.

 

What are the challenges and what are the opportunities in the face of climate change, now and in the future?

 

The exhibition is part of the project “Climate Narratives” which is led by the University of Bergen, where research in the fields of art, social science and natural science engages in dialogue with site-specific indigenous knowledge, across cultures and generations.

 

The art exhibition will set the framework for the planned future exhibitions in Greenland and Fiji.

 

Artists:Irami Buli, Atueta Rabuka, John Vitolio, Nancy Sharma, Ulamila Buiravonu Bulamaibau, Anare Somumu, Susie Elliot, Johanna Beasley, Ben Fong, Nemani Nabalarua, Tomasi Domomate, Paula Ligairua, Josaia McNamara, Jeke Lagi, Skade Henriksen, Eamon O’Kane, Kristian Fly, Karl Petersen, Naja Rosing-Asvid, Julie Edel Hardenberg, Simon Kristoffersen, Aka Hoegh, Lisa Kreutzmann

 

Scientists and anthropologists involved

 

Kerim H. Nisancioglu, Edvard Hviding, Mathew Stiller Reeve, Natalya Gomez, Kristin Richter, Ragnhild Freng Dale, Siri Veland, Camilla S. Andresen, Lars H. Smedsrud, Fiamma Straneo, Andreas Born, Øystein Varpe, Torkel Gissel Nielsen.

 

Curators

Larry Thomas is director of the Oceania Centre at University of the South Pacific (USP) in Suva Fiji. He is a renowned playwright, filmmaker, and curator.

 

Andreas Hoffmann is a curator, writer, researcher, lecturer, currently director for Ilulissani Katersugaasiviit/ / Ilulissat Art Museum, Kalaallit Nunaat / Greenland and artistic director and chief curator of Arctic Culture Lab.

 

Eamon O’Kane is an artist and professor of visual art at KMD, UiB he is Co- Principal Investigator on the NFR, Climate Narratives project.

14.04.2023 17:00 - 14.04.2023 21:00
Kode, Lysverket, visningsrom i 1 etasje.

Åpning av kunstutstilling på Kode i regi av Climate Narratives og OneOceanWeek

Ocean stories

In conjunction with One Ocean Week in Bergen, the University of Bergen and Kode invites you to an exhibition featuring art from the Pacific Ocean, Fiji and Greenland.

 

Greenland and Fiji are very distant parts of the world, but the people who live there are connected through their proximity to nature, their rich narrative culture, the dependence on natural resources, and the pressure from increasing tourism.

 

At the same time, both places are strongly affected by climate change: ice is melting, and the sea is rising. In Greenland, new land is laid bare while the sea creeps into the tropical islands of the Pacific Ocean.One side of the exhibition will be dedicated to artists from Fiji, the other side will be dedicated to artists from Greenland.

 

The interaction between these two very different geographical locations will be elaborated in artworks, lectures and tours. Researchers and artists from the University of Bergen: the Art Academy (KMD), the Faculty of Social Sciences and the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences who work with climate and sea level.

 

How do the communities along the coast of Greenland and on the low-lying Pacific islands face these changes?

 

In the exhibition “Ocean Stories”, artists from Greenland and Fiji tell the stories. The interaction between these two very different geographical locations is explored through artwork, lectures and conversations.

 

What are the challenges and what are the opportunities in the face of climate change, now and in the future?

 

The exhibition is part of the project “Climate Narratives” which is led by the University of Bergen, where research in the fields of art, social science and natural science engages in dialogue with site-specific indigenous knowledge, across cultures and generations.

 

The art exhibition will set the framework for the planned future exhibitions in Greenland and Fiji.

 

Artists:Irami Buli, Atueta Rabuka, John Vitolio, Nancy Sharma, Ulamila Buiravonu Bulamaibau, Anare Somumu, Susie Elliot, Johanna Beasley, Ben Fong, Nemani Nabalarua, Tomasi Domomate, Paula Ligairua, Josaia McNamara, Jeke Lagi, Skade Henriksen, Eamon O’Kane, Kristian Fly, Karl Petersen, Naja Rosing-Asvid, Julie Edel Hardenberg, Simon Kristoffersen, Aka Hoegh, Lisa Kreutzmann

 

Scientists and anthropologists involved

 

Kerim H. Nisancioglu, Edvard Hviding, Mathew Stiller Reeve, Natalya Gomez, Kristin Richter, Ragnhild Freng Dale, Siri Veland, Camilla S. Andresen, Lars H. Smedsrud, Fiamma Straneo, Andreas Born, Øystein Varpe, Torkel Gissel Nielsen.

 

Curators

Larry Thomas is director of the Oceania Centre at University of the South Pacific (USP) in Suva Fiji. He is a renowned playwright, filmmaker, and curator.

 

Andreas Hoffmann is a curator, writer, researcher, lecturer, currently director for Ilulissani Katersugaasiviit/ / Ilulissat Art Museum, Kalaallit Nunaat / Greenland and artistic director and chief curator of Arctic Culture Lab.

 

Eamon O’Kane is an artist and professor of visual art at KMD, UiB he is Co- Principal Investigator on the NFR, Climate Narratives project.

18.04.2023 20:00 - 18.04.2023 21:30
Litteraturhuset i Bergen

Climate change in the Pacific Islands and the Caribbean: young voices

Litteraturhuset i Bergen, Universitetet i Bergen og Bjerknessenteret for klimaforskning inviterer til panelsamtale og debatt om klimaendringer. 

Når breis smelter på Grønland, stiger havet mest i tropene. Hvordan påvirker havstigning og andre klimaendringer livet på lavtliggende øyer i Stillehavet og Karibia? Korallrev og mangrover skjermer veier og hus, men hva skjer når varmt vann og plastforurensing tærer på koraller og trær? 
 
Fem unge klimaforskere fra Fiji, Jamaica og Canada forteller. Bernadette Tunidau har bakgrunn fra utviklingsstudier ved University of the South Pacific, der Ozayr Akbar studerer etikk og juss. Deron Maitland og Chauntelle Green fra University of the West Indies forsker på havstigning og konsekvensene for livet i og ved havet. Natalya Gomez er førsteamanuensis ved McGill University i Montreal, der hun forsker på issmelting og havnivå. 
 
De fem forskerne var med Statsraad Lehmkuhl på deler av jordomseilingen One Ocean Expedition. Denne kvelden møter de sosialantropolog Camilla Borrevik fra Universitetet i Bergen til en samtale om livet ved et hav i endring. 
 
Samtalen vil foregå på engelsk. 
Arrangementet er gratis.

19.04.2023 09:00 - 19.04.2023 14:00
Statsraad Lehmkuhl

Skoledag på Statsraad Lehmkuhl

Akvariet i Bergen, Bjerknessenteret for klimaforskning og Universitetet i Bergen inviterer ungdomsskolene i Bergen til et felles arrangement ombord på Statsraad Lehmkuhl under One Ocean Week.

Det blir lansering av One Ocean Future i regi av Akvariet i Bergen, samt aktivitetsbaserte forskningsstasjoner med fokus på klima, hav og bærekraft i regi av forskere fra Bjerknessenteret.

Tema og aktiviteter for dagen:

  • Tar vi godt nok vare på havet? – En rekke toppinnledere kommer, og det blir debatt for de unge
  • Disse ungdommene gjør noe med utfordringene – hør historiene og møt dem.
  • Forskningsstasjoner hvor elever får prøve seg som havforskere under kyndig veiledning av studenter og forskere fra Bjerknessenteret.

Vi har lagt opp til to sesjoner med opptil 150 skoleelever i hver, den første fra 09:00-11:30 og den andre fra 11:30-14:00. Begge inkludert enkel lunsj ombord.

Den første timen blir felles på stordekket med innlegg og diskusjon etterfulgt av en time med forskningsaktiviteter på og under dekk sammen med forskere og studenter som deltok på One Ocean Expedition. I tillegg til deltakere fra Norge har vi unge forskere fra Jamaica og USA med ombord.

Informasjon om påmelding.

19.04.2023 09:00 - 21.04.2023 16:00
TBA

Bjerknes polar workshop : "Greenland Ice Sheet Stability - lessons from the past"

Bjerknes polar workshop - save the dates! 

Les mer
20.04.2023 10:00 - 20.04.2023 12:00
Undervisningsrommet 4020, Jahnebakken 5

Tropics group discussion

Save the date, program to be published later.

27.04.2023 19:00 - 27.04.2023 20:00
Litteraturhuset i Bergen

Urfolkskunnskap i krisetid

Climate Narratives – series of talks at Litteraturhuset in Bergen

Urfolkskunnskap i krisetid

Hvorfor har urfolks estetiske praksiser fått så stor betydning og slagkraft internasjonalt? Dette spørsmålet stiller Liisa Rávná Finbog i sitt essay “Care, Community and Apocalyptic times”. Gjennom teksten utforsker hun sammenhenger mellom samfunnsendringer, kolonisering, kunst og felleskap. Pandemi, klimaendringer og krig har brakt krisetanken vi kjenner fra populærkulturens apokalypser nærmere. Når vårt verdensbilde krever endring, hvem er bedre å se til enn mennesker som allerede har overlevd slike endringer? 

 

Liisa Rávná Finbog presenterer denne kvelden sine refleksjoner og møter deretter Siri Veland til samtale om urfolkskunnskap, samfunnsendringer og klima. Ordstyrer er Ragnhild Freng Dale fra Vestlandforskning og det tverrfaglige prosjektet “Climate Narratives”.

 

Liisa-Rávná Finbog – akademiker og duojár fra Oslo, Vaapste og Skánit i den norske delen av Sápmi. Som mangeårig utøver av duodji [samisk praksis for estetikk og historiefortelling], kombinert med hennes doktorgrad i museologi har hun et urfolksforskningsfokus som ser på duodji som et samisk kunnskapssystem. Hun er for tiden basert i Tampere, på den finske siden av Sápmi, ved Tampere Universitet. Hennes spesifikke fokus er på forholdet mellom land og urfolks estetikk i Arktis. Liisa Rávná Finbog var også co-kurator for Den Samiske Paviljongen ved Venezia Biennalen 2022. 

 

Siri Veland jobber med tverrfaglig forskning i samspillet mellom menneske og naturmiljø. Hennes interesseområder inkluderer risikosyn, naturressursforvaltning, bærekraftig utvikling, arktiske endringsprosesser, urfolksstudier, og menneskets tidsalder (Antropocen). 

 

Ragnhild Freng Dale er sosialantropolog med særlig interesse i energi, klimaomstilling og hvordan lokalsamfunn påvirkes av klima og samfunnsstrukturer. Hun jobber også tett opp mot kunstfeltet, og samarbeider ofte med kunstnere, spesielt innen teater og scenekunst. 

 

Gratis inngang