Iceland review - 2015, Qupperneq 32

Iceland review - 2015, Qupperneq 32
30 ICELAND REVIEW BY EYGLÓ SVALA ARNARSDÓTTIR. PHOTOS BY PÁLL STEFÁNSSON. NATURE’S ADVOCATE Named after Iceland’s first academic, Stofnun Sæmundar fróða—the University of Iceland’s Institute for Sustainability Studies (ISS)—focuses on the envi- ronment, safety and health; sustainable energy; environmental change and preservation; and sustainable resource management. “Iceland has important natural resources and is as such an ideal location for studies on sustainability,” reasons ISS director Dr. Guðrún Pétursdóttir. “There are few people here and distances are short, so we can create small models which can be expanded to fit larger communities.” Guðrún also mentions well-func- tioning infrastructure and well-educated people, many of whom have an international academic background. GLOBAL RELEVANCE ISS advocates the Planetary Boundaries model by Johan Rockström at the Stockholm Resilience Centre, which defines the earth’s nine planetary boundaries within which humanity can continue to develop and thrive for generations to come, including ocean acidification, climate change, biological diver- sity and freshwater supply. “Although freshwater is abundant in many places, future generations may run out of freshwater. Some boundaries have already been overstepped, like genetic biodiversity. For example, bees seem to be in danger of dis- appearing. People might think ‘good riddance’ but it just so happens that bees are essential for plant fertilization. The con- sequences would be devastating,” warns Guðrún. ISS was established in 2006 by the university’s former rector Páll Skúlason, who passed away earlier this year. Páll decided to merge the university’s institutions for fisheries and environment to strengthen interdisciplinary research on the various aspects of sustainability. ISS works both nationally and internationally, in particular on Nordic and EU-funded research projects. “The latest large grant of ISK 420 million was from NordForsk for a project called NORDRESS,” reveals Guðrún. NORDRESS, which was launched in January 2015, stands The University of Iceland’s Institute for Sustainability Studies is striving for a sustainable future, while busting myths about Iceland’s clean environment and renewable energy. for the Nordic Centre of Excellence on Resilience and Societal Security and is a five-year project on the societal effects of natural hazards in the Nordic countries. It operates under the Social Security Programme of NordForsk, an organization that facilitates and provides funding for Nordic research cooperation and research infrastructure. “NORDRESS studies resilience towards natural hazards,” says Guðrún, explaining that these include river and coastal floods, avalanches and mudslides, extreme weather, forest fires, and volcanic eruptions. “We will, for instance, study the effects of the volcanic eruption in Bárðarbunga [causing lava to erupt in Holuhraun in Northeast Iceland from August 2014 to February 2015] on the people who were exposed to threats of massive floods and gas pollution.” Being a Nordic Centre of Excellence gives ISS and the other partners in NORDRESS leverage in the international compe- tition for research funding, Guðrún explains. “It’s a great honor and an immense opportunity—it’s like having a set of new flight feathers. We will use this opportunity to pursue our research interests on a larger scale.” THE GEOTHERMAL PARADOX Icelanders have long prided themselves on their use of sustain- able energy—both hydropower and geothermal energy—for producing electricity and heating houses, but Guðrún is wary of promoting geothermal as renewable. “Geothermal resources are mined. They renew themselves in a geological timeframe, but not in the timeframe we’re operating in reference to—not in a human lifetime,” she maintains, citing the revelation in 2013 that Hellisheiði power plant outside Reykjavík was unsustainable. “It cannot produce energy according to the initial plans. We have to reconsider how we treat our energy supply and what resourc- es to use.” While Guðrún is for the use of geothermal energy, she points out that, “geothermal energy isn’t green,” given that exploiting it can pollute the environment. “But looking at things in perspective, we should use geothermal energy, not least if
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Iceland review

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