Founding offer · lifetime membership for a single £24, exclusive to our first members · closes 20 June Claim your place →
Global Research Partnerships £24 Lifetime Log inCreate free account

Funded Projects › HORIZON

ICEBERG · INNOVATIVE COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT FOR BUILDING EFFECTIVE RESILIENCE AND ARCTIC OCEAN POLLUTION-CONTROL GOVERNANCE IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE

HORIZONStatus: SIGNED1 January 202430 June 2027EU funding €5,987,060Call HORIZON-CL6-2023-ZEROPOLLUTION-01

The ICEBERG project has a two-fold aim: to comprehensively assess sources, types, distributions, and impacts of pollution in combination with chronic climate-induced stressors on ecosystems and communities in the European Arctic's land-ocean continuum using a One Health approach, and to develop strategies for enhancing community-led resilience, as well as pollution-control governance. To this end, the project focusses on three (sub)regional case studies: western Svalbard, southern Greenland, and northern Iceland. ICEBERG investigates known and emerging pollutants, including macro-, micro, nanoplastics, ship emissions, wastewater, persistent organic pollutants (Dioxins, PCBs, PFAS, PAHs, old and new generation pesticides), and terrigenous elements (heavy metals). To assess the effects of pollutant discharges from Arctic ship traffic, freshwater discharge/cryosphere meltwater, wastewater, and land-based atmospheric pollution on the marine food web the project is using model simulations and complementing these with remote sensing, in-situ observations, and measurements. ICEBERG analyses the sanitary quality of the food chain by characterising chemical contaminants using an exposomics approach, gaining a comprehensive understanding of the synergistic impacts of Climate Change and pollution on human health. It evaluates toxicological impact of micro- and nano-plastics and POPs on human digestive health. The project develops automatic marine litter detection tools combining use of drones, AI and citizen science. ICEBERG champions multi-stakeholder and gender-based approaches to assess the impacts, risks, and vulnerabilities on Indigenous and local communities and co-create scenarios of change. Scenario modelling is used to co-design local pollution-control strategies, which includes both mitigation (reducing pollution) and adaptation (reducing vulnerability to pollution). ICEBERG creates novel governance approaches pollution-control in the Arctic at multiple scales.

Consortium · 16 organisations

coordinator

OULUN YLIOPISTO

FI · €862,375

participant

HASKOLINN A AKUREYRI

IS · €278,000

participant

LAPIN YLIOPISTO

FI · €617,500

participant

WOMEN OF THE ARCTIC RY

FI · €378,750

participant

HELMHOLTZ-ZENTRUM FUR UMWELTFORSCHUNG GMBH - UFZ

DE · €180,831

participant

KASKAS MEDIA OY

FI · €320,000

participant

CHRISTIAN-ALBRECHTS-UNIVERSITAET ZU KIEL

DE · €559,000

participant

GFZ HELMHOLTZ-ZENTRUM FUR GEOFORSCHUNG

DE · €247,420

participant

FUNDACJA FORSCIENCE

PL · €341,250

participant

SCIDRONES TEXNOVLASTOS IKE

EL · €257,500

participant

CONSIGLIO NAZIONALE DELLE RICERCHE

IT · €292,750

participant

INSTITUT NATIONAL DE RECHERCHE POUR L'AGRICULTURE, L'ALIMENTATION ET L'ENVIRONNEMENT

FR · €247,813

participant

HELMHOLTZ-ZENTRUM FUR OZEANFORSCHUNG KIEL (GEOMAR)

DE · €586,371

participant

ECOLE NATIONALE VETERINAIRE, AGROALIMENTAIRE ET DE L'ALIMENTATION NANTES ATLANTIQUE

FR · €361,250

participant

BARCELONA SUPERCOMPUTING CENTER CENTRO NACIONAL DE SUPERCOMPUTACION

ES · €293,750

participant

ASSOCIACAO PARA O DESENVOLVIMENTO DO ATLANTIC INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH CENTRE

PT · €162,500

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

← Find collaborators and more funded projects

Source: CORDIS, Publications Office of the European Union. Global Research Partnerships surfaces open EU research data to help you find collaborators; we are not affiliated with the European Union.