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Bjerknes proposal writing class

Tidspunkt

21. oktober 2025, 08:30-10:00

Sted

Online on zoom. Writing seminars on-site: Room U1-1120 at NORCE, BCCR (entrance through Jahnebakken 5, to the right after entering)

The Bjerknes Proposal Writing Class (Bjerknes proposal writing training 2) is an offer to scientists at the Bjerknes Centre who plan to submit a project proposal in 2026 and have little or no experience yet in proposal writing. By taking the class, you will consecutively develop your idea into a proposal draft and finally, a complete proposal ready to submit within the deadlines of 2026. This writing class will complement the support you get from your academic supervisor or scientific mentor but cannot replace that kind of support.

Lectures online on zoom. Link to all the lectures: (will follow)

Link to the special seminar: (will follow)

Link to all teaching material: (will follow)

 

Class format and time effort:

Weekly alternating lectures and writing seminars

Lecture-sessions consist of 1 hour lecture + up to 30 minutes question/discussion online: background and guidelines for a specific proposal aspect, instructions for specific remote work on your proposal;

Writing sessions consist of 1 hour writing on-site: perform remote work, present results and get feedback.

Remote work:

1-2 hours/week remote work on your proposal (in addition to writing seminars)

To be performed by the next class 

Individual meetings with assigned adviser and/or scientific mentor on demand 

You will get individual written feedback on your remote work from your assigned adviser

Imperfect and tentative individual work is better than no remote work!

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01.09.25

BCCR seminar 1st September: "Abrupt CO₂ uptake and ecosystem responses in the Subpolar North Atlantic under global warming".

Name of speaker: Huiji Lee from Seoul National University, South Korea. Abstract The ocean is a crucial sink for anthropogenic CO2 emissions, yet its future response remains uncertain. Here, using the Community Earth System Model (CESM2) under different CO2 emission rates, we find a pronounced weakening of ocean CO2 uptake in the Subpolar North Atlantic (SPNA), distinct from the global response. Initially, the SPNA is an effective CO2 sink, but due to the contraction of deep convection, the uptake decreases and the oceanic pCO2 exceeds the global average. Recognizing the importance of regional ocean circulation in CO2 uptake, we identify a nonlinear relationship between environmental conditions and uptake response, revealing consistent thresholds for the emergence of uptake weakening. Overall, the distinct uptake response reflects the key role of regional dynamics in regulating the CO2 budget and geochemical environment, and such abrupt change in the regional carbon cycle may ultimately trigger severe ecosystem disruptions. This highlights the importance of accounting for regional dynamics in future CO2 mitigation strategies. About the speaker I am currently a PhD student at the Seoul National University, South Korea, and a visiting researcher at NORCE/Bjerknes Centre for six months. My research interests focus on the ocean carbon cycle and marine ecosystems, with particularly how ocean buffering capacity regulates climate projections and the potential of ocean-based carbon dioxide removal strategies. Zoom details https://uib.zoom.us/j/62554083320?pwd=w66YFoIhFNBTjgDA4bKppdlKAzpOoj.1