Archive of News and Press Releases

The ESA satellite CryoSat-2.
Online news

AWI and ESA start operational service for improved satellite sea-ice thickness observations

Two current satellite missions from the European Space Agency (ESA) provide data to measure Arctic sea-ice thickness. The thickness of sea ice is a key parameter for many scientific and operational applications: But in contrast to the sea-ice coverage, measuring the thickness with satellites has always been challenging. 
Investigations of sediment composition and soil organisms in a gripper sample.
Press releases

Major questions concerning the role of microscopic life and our future

“Microbiology of global change” is the name of the research area that explores microbial responses to global warming, natural resource depletion, and environmental pollution, as well as feedback mechanisms and functions in climate change. The internationally respected journal “Nature Reviews Microbiology” asked Prof Antje Boetius for her thoughts on the area:“Given the fact that microorganisms have significant effects on our planet’s material flows, productivity and health, not to mention on us human beings, this field of research will provide essential…
Online news

Ralf Dahrendorf Prize for Potsdam Research Team

Today the members of the PETA-CARB team at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research in Potsdam have every reason to celebrate, as they were recently honoured with a brand-new award: the Ralf Dahrendorf Prize for the European Research Area, which recognises outstanding engagement in key EU research projects, as well as the motivation to share the project outcomes with the public. The prize, which is awarded by Germany’s Federal Ministry of Education and Research, went to a total of six recipients, each of which will…
Weekly report

White smoker and yellow sulphur of the Kemp Caldera

On Sunday, 5th May, we arrived at the Kemp Caldera, a prominent crater of volcanic origin at the southern end of the South Sandwich volcanic arc.
Permafrost recovered from below the western Laptev Sea shows typical ice and sand layers of permafrost that formed on land.
Online news

Bubbling under the Arctic Seabed

The fate of permafrost - soil that is frozen for 2 or more years - is of huge importance for the global climate because of the large amounts of organic carbon stored in it, which can be released into the atmosphere as these soils start to thaw. 
Short news

Second REKLIM Conference: 23rd – 25th September 2019

The Helmholtz Climate Initiative „Regional Climate Change“ (REKLIM) invites to the 2nd International Conference „Our Climate - Our Future: Regional Perspectives on a Global Challenge“. Abstracts can be still submitted by May 31st.
Thermokarst-Lakes in Alaska
Online news

The sleeping giant is waking

For years now, scientists have been investigating how the gradual thawing of near-surface permafrost, which takes place in the uppermost layers of Arctic soils and in the course of decades, will affect the release of previously frozen carbon to the atmosphere. Now an international team of researchers, including AWI researcher Prof Guido Grosse, has underscored the urgent nature of another phenomenon, which has only been sporadically investigated: the abrupt thawing of ice-rich permafrost, which can transform entire landscapes in only months of years…
Press releases

Half of the coral reefs have already been lost

The oceans are virtually as important as land-based ecosystems for human beings. Further, since the changes taking place underwater are far less visible than those on land, it was all the more important that the IPBES pay due attention to the oceans in its Global Assessment report. In the following, we present a commentary by Julian Gutt, one of the report’s lead authors and a marine biologist at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI). 
Weekly report

Active volcanoes of the South Sandwich Island Arc

We started the new week on Monday, 29th April, with a long dive to sample smoking chimneys and vent animals in the known hydrothermal field of the segment E2-South. Here we concentrated our efforts on the active vent systems around Dog’s Head, a complex structure consisting of 4 chimneys, which are lined up nicely one after the other, fused on their bases and characterised by single black smoking orifices in 12-15m height.  
Antje Boetius and Melanie Bergmann at the German Norwegian Ocean Forum. (Photo: Lisa Grosfeld)
Online news

Sustainable oceans as a shared responsibility

From the Arctic to the North Sea: this year’s German Norwegian Ocean Forum was held in Bremen’s Übersee Museum. The spotlight topic of the symposium, which was jointly organised by the AWI, Innovation Norway, and the Royal Norwegian Embassy, was ‘The sustainable future of our oceans’. AWI Director Antje Boetius moderated the event.