It Takes a Village
By Colleen Flaherty, Communications & Information Coordinator and Rebecca Irelan, Communications Manager and Cameron Wake, Research Professor, University of New Hampshire
If you told 18-year-old Kendall Gray she would present her research on her university’s energy infrastructure alongside University of New Hampshire (UNH) president James Dean, she would not have believed you. But that is exactly where 21-year-old Kendall found herself in October 2019 at the announcement of a partnership between the university and local electric utility, Eversource, to increase energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions.
“It was wild,” said Gray. “I was the only woman on stage, discussing UNH’s leadership in sustainability and our goal to become carbon neutral before 2050.”
Gray is a great example of how the University of New Hampshire envisions an integrated approach to sustainability education, research, and practice. As a summer 2019 Sustainability Fellow, she worked with university faculty and staff to update the university’s climate action plan. UNH has already reduced its greenhouse gas emissions by 51% below its 2001 baseline. The main campus is also powered by 100% renewable electricity, the majority of which is generated on-campus using local landfill gas. Now, carbon neutrality is the goal, and the hope is to achieve it before 2050. In order to do so, UNH will need to engage a broad range of community members, including students.
“UNH has done amazing work to reduce its emissions. I was inspired by just how much has been done and how dedicated faculty and staff are to sustainability”, said Gray. “My fellowship focused on the largest emissions producer for campus – buildings.” Due to higher technological needs, new buildings at UNH consume 33–38% more energy compared to older buildings. Gray’s findings recommend updated planning, design, and construction guidelines that incorporate the cost of carbon into planning, budgeting, and operations. The university is working to implement Gray’s findings.
Kendall Gray is not the only UNH student whose research supports a resilient community in the face of the climate crisis. Clarice Perryman, a PhD student in UNH’s Natural Resources and Earth System Science PhD program, investigates greenhouse gas emissions from thawing permafrost in the Arctic and from peatland bogs in New Hampshire. “In a few decades, those Arctic, boreal peatlands may look pretty similar to the New Hampshire peatland bogs due to climate change,” Perryman explains. More specifically, she studies the role that bacteria called methanotrophs play. These bacteria can consume methane, potentially prevent a fraction of the gas from entering the atmosphere, and thus reduce the contribution to climate change.
Like Gray, Perryman knows the value of her research lies in the action it spurs. She is passionate about discussing her research and climate change with state and national lawmakers. After the 2016 US presidential election, scientists were concerned that federal websites would be scrubbed of any mention of climate change. Perryman facilitated a “data rescue” event at UNH where volunteers helped archive websites that held climate-related content and data. In the lead-up to the presidential primary elections in 2020, Perryman was selected to participate in the NH Youth Climate and Clean Energy Town Hall, where she asked one of the Democratic candidates about her plan to help the nation transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources, and how to help people adapt to new job prospects. “I do believe we need to get off fossil fuels as quickly as possible, but I want to see that happen in a way that’s just for everyone,” Perryman says.
Perryman feels a call to share what she considers the privilege of her educational opportunities, and to help connect the dots on climate change for people who may not think about it on a routine basis.
“People have different priorities, so they don’t always make decisions based on climate change,” she says. “But as someone who very much understands the science behind what is happening, I feel I have an obligation to share what I know, and help people understand the science and what that means for their everyday lives and for the future of their children and families.”
Many university students, faculty and staff echo Perryman’s sense of responsibility. It fuels research and gives university practices a backbone of purpose. Students like Gray and Perryman have taken advantage of an institution that encourages them to apply their education and research to better understand systems and to cooperate with stakeholders to make impactful changes. This nuanced approach to the global climate crisis gives students a sense of hope.
“My parents were concerned that my field of study would be too depressing,” said Gray. “But after working with my mentors, fellows, and other universities, I feel so hopeful. I think we might be able to adapt to and mitigate climate change so everyone can thrive.”
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Table of Contents
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Letter from the President
By Lars Kullerud
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Editorial
By Outi Snellman
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Letter from Monaco
By HSH Prince Albert II of Monaco
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Climate Action – A Need for Policy
By Pekka Haavisto
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Russia’s Ten Priorities in the Arctic
By Alexander V. Krutikov
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Learning from the Crisis: Issues in Strengthening Online Learning for the Future
By Diane Hirshberg and Paul Wasko
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Step Up and Take Climate Leadership
By Eirik Sivertsen
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Multidisciplinary Research as Climate Action
By Annika Granebeck and Nina Kirchner
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Exploring Arctic Policy from an Inuit Perspective
By Nadine C. Fabbi, Michelle Koutnik, Ellen Ahlness and Elizabeth Wessells
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Stories from the Ice: A History of Arctic Climate and Environmental Change Told in Ice Cores
By Karl Kreutz, Cameron Wake, Erich Osterberg and Alison Criscitiello
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Student story: Anna-Katri Kulmala
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UArctic Annual Report 2019
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Building Relationships with Land: Bushkids Initiative
By Chloe Dragon Smith
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Understanding Climate Change Through Storytelling, Culture, and Art
By Aaluk Edwardson, Maleah Wenzel, Sabena Allen, Shelbi Fitzpatrick and Melody Brown Burkins
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Many a Little Makes a Mickle: Coastal Studies Students and Staff Take Action Against Marine Litter
By Catherine Chambers and Astrid Fehling
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Our Plastic Ocean, Our Clean Ocean: Art as a Catalyst to Build Understanding
By Herminia Din
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Worlds in Motion – The National Museums of World Culture, Sustainability and the Future
By Sofie Öberg Magnusson and Martin Schultz
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Voluntourism in the Faroe Islands: A Sustainable Nordic Tourism Model
By Jonathan Wood
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Northern Nursing Students Raising Awareness and Spreading Knowledge on Climate Actions
By Kathie Pender, Donald Leidl and Bente Norbye
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Smart Societies and Arctic Sustainability: Opportunities and Challenges
By Nadezda Nazarova, Evgenii Aleksandrov and Anatoli Bourmistrov
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Shortening the Time from Observing to Decision-making in the Arctic
By Olivia Lee and Finn Danielsen
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“Breath of the North”: A Literary Portrait of Jean Malaurie
By Jan Borm
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Climate Change – Key Challenge of Arctic Herders’ Livelihoods and Cultures
By Alena Gerasimova, Svetlana Avelova, Mikhail Pogodaev, Anatoly Zhozhikov, Anders Oskal and Svein D. Mathiesen
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Alumni Testimonials from the Model Arctic Council