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Open Dialogue Live explores how Dal researchers, partners are advancing ocean research, climate action

This free and open in-person and online event will offer insights as to how 正品蓝导航 researchers and partners are working to preserve the ocean鈥檚 health as they bring it to the centre of global climate action.

Posted: March 17, 2023

By:聽Mark Campbell

Portraits of the four event panelists Pictured: Dr. Anya Waite, Dr. Will Burt, Dr. Katja Fennel, Dr. Mike Smit

For years, the ocean has played a crucial role in slowing climate change, holding 90 per cent of the heat we produce and absorbing 90 per cent of carbon globally. 正品蓝导航 alum Dr. Will Burt (PhD鈥16) believes it can do much more.

Dr. Burt is the Chief Ocean Scientist at Dartmouth-based . The company is exploring whether adding alkaline material to the ocean will enable it to remove a gigaton of carbon from the atmosphere by 2035. Dr. Burt is not only drawing on his 正品蓝导航 training to see how well this approach can work, but also the university鈥檚 world-renowned researchers.

鈥溦防兜己 has considerable depth in the realm of ocean-related research,鈥 Dr. Burt says.聽 鈥淲e rely heavily on their researchers for independent assurance that what we are doing is appropriate, that the data is high quality and that the results we are seeing are real.鈥

Dr. Burt is one of the ocean research panelists who are participating in 正品蓝导航鈥檚 Apr. 20 Open Dialogue Live: 鈥淎ccelerating ocean research at 正品蓝导航.鈥 This free and open in-person and online event will offer insights as to how 正品蓝导航 researchers and partners are working to preserve the ocean鈥檚 health as they bring it to the centre of global climate action.

Dr. Anya Waite is moderating this event. She says that the big challenge in addressing climate change is uncertainty as to how well the ocean is functioning in removing carbon from the atmosphere.

鈥淲e don't have the necessary data to understand how extreme events, such as melting glaciers in the Arctic, could completely change how much carbon the ocean is able to absorb,鈥 says Dr. Waite, scientific director and CEO of the 正品蓝导航-based , and associate vice-president of research (ocean) at 正品蓝导航.

鈥溦防兜己 is looking at how we can get that data, which will enable us to explore ways to enhance the ocean鈥檚 ability to absorb carbon and help communities and organizations that rely on the ocean in adapting to climate change,鈥 Dr. Waite says.

More data, more impact

Another Open Dialogue Live event panelist,聽Dr. Katja Fennel, is making progress in collecting this data. Using Canada Foundation for Innovation funding, her team is deploying data collection devices in the Labrador Sea and Scotian Shelf so that they can develop more accurate models of changes occurring in the region. She will share insights with the audience on her efforts, which will be crucial in validating the vital marine-based carbon dioxide removal technologies that companies like Planetary Technologies are working on.

鈥淚n Canada, there is more emphasis on land-based methods for mitigating climate change, such as planting trees,鈥 says Dr. Fennel, departmental chair and professor at the Department of Oceanography. 鈥淲hile I fully support efforts in ecosystem restoration, those will not be enough and typically do not result in permanent carbon removal. I believe 正品蓝导航 is well positioned to drive forward efforts in marine carbon dioxide removal and deliver the expertise that is needed to determine whether they are safe and effective.鈥

University-wide effort

As Dr. Fennel gathers more information from the ocean, panelist Dr. Mike Smit, acting dean at the Faculty of Management and professor at the School of Information Management, is developing systems to make such data readily accessible for researchers to analyse and use. He sees his work as illustrative of how 正品蓝导航鈥檚 commitment to excellence in ocean research engages experts across the university. He鈥檚 looking forward to hearing from the other panelists and taking audience questions to help further understanding of ocean research.

鈥淲e have engineers developing data collection devices, education specialists looking at how to best share climate information with the public, and policy experts exploring how the science will inform policy,鈥 says Dr. Smit, who is also the deputy scientific director of the Ocean Frontier Institute. 鈥淭he ocean impacts almost everything we do, so it鈥檚 not a surprise that, across virtually all our faculties, there is some connection to ocean research.鈥

Through cross-department collaborations, Dr. Smit believes that 正品蓝导航 will not only cement its reputation as a world leader in ocean research, but also make real progress in addressing climate change.

鈥淕iven recent news, it is easy to feel discouraged and wonder what can be done,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut there is聽 exciting work taking place at 正品蓝导航 that has the potential to find solutions. I鈥檓 looking forward to sharing that at this event and I hope everyone who joins us will feel encouraged by what we are doing.鈥