Episodes
Published 12/27/23
Phd-student Edson Silva at the Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center is talking with our host Stephen Outten, Senior researcher at the Nansen center, about one of the newest tools in our predicting arsenal, an algae bloom predictor. Trained on the coast of north Norway, it can be a great support for managing our costs, but it can be retrained for usage anywhere. Support and editing by Ingjald Pilskog, associate professor at Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.
Published 06/30/23
In Bergen mid-March, the climate festival Varmere, våtere, villere (Warmer, wetter, wilder) filled three floors in Bergen over three days, for talks and debates on climate change and necessary solutions. Devyn Remme, PhD Candidate, at the Center for Climate and Energy Transition (CET), University of Bergen, works in research of the social and environmental consequences of the transition to electric cars from a global perspective. At the festival she was in the "Around the World with Climate...
Published 05/12/23
In Bergen mid-March, the climate festival Varmere, våtere, villere (Warmer, wetter, wilder) filled three floors in Bergen over three days, for talks and debates on climate change and necessary solutions. Vandhna Kumar, postdoctoral fellow at the Geophysical Institute (GFI) and the Bjerknes Centre for Climate research, is from Fiji, and works in the OceanStates project at the University of Bergen. At the festival she was in the "Around the World with Climate Science" to talk about her...
Published 04/28/23
Oxygen is important for the living creatures in the deep ocean. When global oceans warm, some processes lead to less oxygen in the deep. This somewhat scary trend is what Rachael Sanders investigate in her work in the project O2Ocean. In Bergen, mid-March, the climate festival Varmere, våtere, villere (Warmer, wetter, wilder) filled a 3-floored house in Bergen over three days, for talks and debates on climate change and necessary solutions. Rachael Sanders, postdoctoral fellow at NORCE and...
Published 03/31/23
Professor Eystein Jansen is one of the founders of the Bjerknes centre for climate research. His field, paleoclimate, is vital to understand how earths climate has changed and is still changing. By studying the past, we have been able to do good predictions of how we humans affect the climate we have now, and the future climate. Our host Stephen Outten is from the Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center and our co-host Ingjald Pilskog is from the Western Norway University of Applied...
Published 12/16/22
Inès Ollivier spent a year in Antarctica where she tended instruments that gives us an understanding on how snow accumulates into the massive ice sheet that we know as the Antarctic. Now she is well into her first year as a PhD-student in the EU-funded DEEPICE project. In this project they studies proxies in deep ice cores to understand the past climate dynamics in Antarctica. Inès Ollivier is a PhD-student at the Geophysical institute, UoB, and a Bjerknes Centre researcher. Learn about her...
Published 07/06/22
Anton Korosov works with observations and models to predict sea ice.
Published 05/03/22
From Curacao to Havana: A first-hand experience of causes, consequences and solutions to climate change. Kerim Nisancioglu, professor at the University of Bergen and research leader at the Bjerknes Centre, speaks about the three-week cross-disciplinary course during the One Ocean Expedition.
Published 03/17/22
Danielle Grant is a PhD-student that hunts ancient DNA under the sea ice in the Arctic. As part of the EU-funded AGENSI project Grant is working on understanding the past variability of sea ice in the Arctic by finding fossile DNA in the sediments on the ocean floor north of Svalbard. Learn about her work together with our host Stephen Outten from Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center and co-host Ingjald Pilskog from Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.
Published 01/27/22
Hva er egentlig en merd og hva er koblingen mellom fisk og klima? Du får svaret i studentpodden #RealfagUiB, en serie på fem podcaster hvor UiB-studenter stiller klimaspørsmål til klimaforskere. Medvirkende: Forsker ved Bjerknessenteret og Havforskningsinstituttet Frode Vikebø, fiskehelsestudent Anna Nygård Johansen og havbrukstudent Christina Ingdal Lenke til nettsted: https://www.uib.no/realfag
Published 12/13/21
Hva er CO2, og hvordan kan vi fange og lagre CO2? Og hjelper det egentlig mot global oppvarming? Hør mer i studentpodden #RealfagUiB, en serie på fem podcaster hvor UiB-studenter stiller klimaspørsmål til klimaforskere. Medvirkende: Forsker ved UiB Martin Fernø og fysikkstudent Anne-Line Sørberg Lenke til nettsted: https://www.uib.no/realfag  
Published 12/13/21
Hva er forskjellen på vær og klima og hvor lenge har vi visst at global oppvarming er en greie? Du får svaret i studentpodden #RealfagUiB, en serie på fem podcaster hvor UiB-studenter stiller klimaspørsmål til klimaforskere. Medvirkende: Forsker ved Bjerknessenteret og UiB Helge Drange og energistudentene Ida Louise Mortensen og Ann Louise Egelandsdal Lenke til nettsted: https://www.uib.no/realfag
Published 12/13/21
Hva er fortidsklima og hva kan det si oss om klimaet i fremtiden, eller i dag? Hør mer i denne episoden av studentpodden #RealfagUiB, en serie på fem podcaster hvor UiB-studenter stiller klimaspørsmål til klimaforskere. Medvirkende: Direktør for Bjerknessenteret for klimaforskning Kikki Kleiven og geostudentene Stine Gregersen og Natalie Blindheim Lenke til nettsted: https://www.uib.no/realfag
Published 12/13/21
Hva har matematikk med klima å gjøre, og hva er klimarisiko? Det får du svaret på i denne episoden av studentpodden #RealfagUiB. Medvirkende: Forsker ved Bjerknessenteret og NORCE Marie Pontoppidan og matematikkstudent Johanne Holmøy
Published 12/13/21
Kristin Richter, researcher at Norce and the Bjerknes Centre, is looking into the deepwater in the North-Atlantic ocean. With Argo floats and other observation they have found that there is lacking watermasses traveling southwards in the deep ocean. Here you can listen to this research and get to know Kristin Richter and the research she is doing together with her colleagues. 
Published 09/02/21
Jenny Hagen, a young PhD candidate at Geophysical Institute and the Bjerknes Centre, is working with taking flood prediction the next step by introducing artificial intelligence. In this podcast she explain how they can speed up and improve flood prediction, even in a changing climate, by letting the machine learn from historical data. Stephen Outten is a researcher at Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center and Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research. Ingjald Pilskog is an associated...
Published 08/05/21
Most people has a good relationship with forests and the uncontrolled logging around the world is taking its toll on both the wildlife, but also the climate. It stand to reason that letting the forests grow and claim land should be unconditionally positive for the planet, but as often it is not so simple. Priscilla Mooney, a researcher at NORCE and the Bjerknes centre, talks to our host Stephen Outten and co-host and producer Ingjald Pilskog about the consequences of both the destruction of...
Published 03/15/21
Parisavtalen vart vedteken under FNs klimatoppmøte i desember 2015, etter mange års arbeid for gjennomslag for internasjonal klimahandling. I den står det at me skal etterstrebe å halde temperaturauken til under to grader. Kvar er vi no, fem år etterpå? Vi skal ikkje ein gong seie orda «2020 har vore eit spesielt år», sagt uttallege gongar sidan mars, og især no i slutten av desember gjenteke i årskavalkadar. For klimaet sin del har det likevel vore første året ein reduksjon i utslepp av CO2...
Published 12/31/20
The great ice-sheets in Antarctica and Greenland holds many mysteries. David Chandler, a postdoctoral fellow at the Bjerknes Centre and NORCE, are trying together with his colleagues to unravel these mysteries. In this episode David Chandler takes Stephen Outten and Ingjald Pilskog to the Antarctica where we are discussing how global warming are melting the ice-sheet, in some places irreversibly, leading to sea level rise and life altering climate changes to people all over the globe. David...
Published 11/15/20
Gratulerer med dagen, Fridtjof Nansen! 10. oktober 2020 ville han ha vært 159 år, og vi holder virket hans i live gjennom samarbeidet i Arven etter Nansen.Forsker ved Universitetet i Bergen og Bjerknessenteret Marius snakker om inspirasjonen fra Nansens arbeid og vitenskap, grunnlaget han la for klimavarsling, og forskerrollen da og nå. Klimavarsling – en arv etter Nansen Oppvarming på 4°C i løpet av de siste 50 årene på Svalbard Hvordan kan vi bruke Fridtjof Nansens forskning i dag?
Published 10/09/20
Heatwaves are the extreme weather events that kills the most worldwide together with its close cousin the long-term draught. Peer-reviewed analysis places the European death toll at more than 70,000, in the 2003 European heatwave alone [1]. This was in developed countries with the resources to mitigate the worst consequences. It lasted one month which makes this event as mortal as the ongoing pandemic.The WHO defines heatwaves as more than three days with temperatures above 25 degrees C. This...
Published 09/17/20
Is warm weather to Europe, North America's greatest export? Listen to the science conversation between Tim Woollings, Associate Professor at the University of Oxford, and Stephen Outten and Ingjald Pilskog podcast hosts and researchers at the Bjerknes Centre. Dr. Tim Woollings, has been visiting researcher at the Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research the last months. He is an expert in jet streams and large scale atmospheric dynamics.  The scientists discuss how the jet stream causes heat...
Published 07/02/20
Today, we’re giving you a three-course meal, through the writings of Scisnack. SciSnack is a group led by scientists at the University of Bergen, with the objective of improving writing skills of young and early career scientists around the world. You can read all these and more at SciSnack.com. How can evaporation of rain calm down the weather? – Kristine Flacké Haualand, 2019 Terrain and climate models – Marie Pontoppidan, 2017 Surfing atmospheric waves – the Morning Glory phenomenon...
Published 06/30/20