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13.03.2019 11:51

European Geosciences Union meeting: Press conferences announced (EGU 2019 media advisory 3)

Dr. Bárbara Ferreira EGU Executive Office
European Geosciences Union

    The schedule of press conferences at the EGU General Assembly is now available. It includes media briefings on the latest research on plastic pollution, European climate, and health risks, as well as a press conference where scientists will announce the Antarctic location they found to drill for 1.5 million-year old ice. The meeting programme features a Union symposium on climate tipping points and a session on science, politics and European (dis)integration featuring Mario Monti and Ilaria Capua.

    The meeting is taking place on 7–12 April at the Austria Center Vienna and is expected to attract more than 14,000 scientists from around the world. Journalists interested in attending should register online by tomorrow at https://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/registration/eligibility/.

    CONTENTS

    *Press conference schedule
    *Meeting programme
    *Programme highlights
    *EGU Public Lecture
    *Media registration

    PRESS CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

    Press conferences at the EGU General Assembly will be held at the Press Centre located near Foyer F on the Yellow Level 0 (Ground Floor) of the Austria Center Vienna. All times are CEST (local time in Vienna).

    *PC1. Health risks: air pollution, emerging viruses, malaria mosquitoes (Monday, 8 April, 14:00)
    *PC2. Beyond EPICA: The quest for a 1.5 million year ice core (Tuesday, 9 April, 09:00)
    *PC3. Latest research on plastic pollution (Tuesday, 9 April, 10:30)
    *PC4. Monitoring the Earth from space: new findings (Tuesday, 9 April, 13:00)
    *PC5. The 2018 heatwave and new research on European climate (Tuesday, 9 April, 14:00)
    *PC6. Marks of the Anthropocene: past, present and future (Wednesday, 10 April, 09:00)
    *PC7. New hazards research: Anak Krakatau, glacial lakes and giant quakes (Wednesday, 10 April, 15:00)

    A press conference on ESA Mars science may be added to the list of media events in the next few weeks.
    --
    HEALTH RISKS: AIR POLLUTION, EMERGING VIRUSES, MALARIA MOSQUITOES
    Monday, 8 April, 14:00

    Climate change and increasing air and water pollution bring new health risks to human populations. In this press conference, journalists will hear about new findings on the impacts of air pollution on human health and premature mortality for different age ranges and different diseases in Europe. Another team will present new results on how the future distribution of Anopheles mosquitoes may increase malaria risk in some European countries. In another presentation, journalists will hear about new research in slums in sub Saharan Africa that found emerging virus communities in groundwater.

    Participants:
    Patricia Tarín-Carrasco
    PhD Student, Department of Physics, University of Murcia, Spain
    Elke Hertig
    Associate Professor, Institute of Geography, University of Augsburg, Germany
    Jan Willem Foppen
    Associate Professor of Hydrology, IHE Delft Institute for Water Education, the Netherlands

    Related scientific sessions: AS3.15, HS8.1.6, ITS4.2/CL4.21/HS11.21/OS2.11
    --
    BEYOND EPICA: THE QUEST FOR A 1.5 MILLION YEAR ICE CORE
    Tuesday, 9 April, 09:00

    An ideal location has been found for drilling an ice core which goes as far back in Earth’s history as possible. Internationally leading ice and climate scientists of 14 institutions from ten European countries have been searching for this spot in Antarctica in the project Beyond EPICA – Oldest Ice funded by the European Commission. They are going to report on their Antarctic field campaigns that led to the choice of the drill site and give an outlook for the next step to recover an ice core. This ‘oldest ice’ would allow to improve our understanding of past processes in the climate system over the last 1.5 million years and improve prognoses for the future.

    Participants:
    Olaf Eisen
    Coordinator Beyond EPICA – Oldest Ice (BE-OI) Coordination and Support Action, Alfred-Wegener-Institute, Bremerhaven, Germany
    Carlo Barbante
    Coordinator Beyond EPICA – Oldest Ice Core (BE-OIC), Institute for the Dynamics of Environmental Processes (IDPA–CNR) & University of Venice, Italy
    Catherine Ritz
    BE-OI scientist, Institute for Geosciences and Environmental research (IGE), Grenoble, France
    Barbara Stenni
    BE-OIC scientist, University of Venice, Italy

    Related scientific session: CL1.09/CR1.10/NP4.7
    --
    LATEST RESEARCH ON PLASTIC POLLUTION
    Tuesday, 9 April, 10:30

    Plastic is everywhere. This durable and widely used material is a persistent pollutant that contaminates rivers, can damage marine life and enter the food chain. In this press conference, researchers will present the first evidence of the occurrence of microplastic in a terrestrial glacier environment and the first global overview of microplastic distributions in rivers, lakes and estuaries. Moving from the land to the sea, we will hear about the latest global simulations of dispersion and accumulation of plastic in the oceans, including results of a 3D model of plastic distribution in the ocean waters. We will also hear about how marine plastic debris can be used to improve our understanding of ocean currents.

    Participants:
    Roberto Sergio Azzoni
    Professor, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, University of Milan, Italy
    Stefan Krause
    Professor of Ecohydrology and Biogeochemistry, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
    Alethea Mountford
    PhD Student, Earth, Ocean and Planetary Sciences Group, School of Natural and Environmental Sciences, Newcastle University, United Kingdom
    Erik van Sebille
    Associate Professor in Oceanography and Climate Change at the Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research, Department of Physics, Utrecht University, the Netherlands

    Related scientific sessions: ITS5.2/OS4.13/EOS10.2/BG3.18/GM6.6/HS11.63, SCS2/HS1.2.13/OS4.36, CR7.2/BG1.49/HS2.3.7
    --
    MONITORING THE EARTH FROM SPACE: NEW FINDINGS
    Tuesday, 9 April, 13:00

    Technology advances now allow us to see the Earth from space in unprecedented detail and scientists are increasingly using satellite data to help us learn about our planet. At a presentation in this press conference, journalists will hear preliminary findings from work that used satellite data from the Landsat archive to reconstruct 35 years of forest mortality for all of continental Europe. A team from Italy will report on new techniques to monitor ground deformation of active volcanoes from space, using Copernicus Sentinel-1 data, while a UK team will report on their method to detect marine litter using data from the Sentinel-2 satellite. In a final presentation, we will hear the first results from the Atmosphere-Space Interactions Monitor (ASIM), a suite of instruments on the International Space Station observing flashes of gamma-rays and lightning into the stratosphere powered by thunderstorms.

    Participants:
    Cornelius Senf
    Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU), Vienna, Austria
    Francesco Casu
    Researcher, Institute for Electromagnetic Sensing of the Environment, National Research Council of Italy (IREA-CNR), Naples, Italy
    Lauren Biermann
    Earth Observation Scientist, Plymouth Marine Laboratory, UK
    Torsten Neubert
    Principal Investigator of the ASIM Mission and Chief Consultant, Technical University of Denmark, National Space Institute/DTU Space, Kgs Lyngby, Denmark

    Related scientific sessions: BG2.3, NH6.1/GI3.20/HS11.38, NH1.2/AS1.29, ITS5.2/OS4.13/EOS10.2/BG3.18/GM6.6/HS11.63
    --
    THE 2018 HEATWAVE AND NEW RESEARCH ON EUROPEAN CLIMATE
    Tuesday, 9 April, 14:00

    The 2018 heatwave in North America, Europe and Asia saw extreme temperatures that caused loss of life, severe wildfires, and damage to infrastructures. A presentation in this press conference will look into the role human-induced climate change played in causing this record-breaking heatwave. Zooming in on Europe, another presentation will outline the key results from the European State of the Climate 2018 report. Following this, scientists will reveal striking new findings on the future evolution of Alpine glaciers and present new research on past and future snow conditions in Europe. Changing focus and looking into the European past, a final presentation will show what research into past climate conditions and construction activity can tell us about disease, famine and war in Europe from 1250 to 1699.

    Participants:
    Martha Marie Vogel
    Researcher, Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
    Freja Vamborg
    Senior Scientist at the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S), European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, Reading UK
    Harry Zekollari
    Researcher, Laboratory of Hydraulics, Hydrology and Glaciology (VAW), ETH Zurich, Switzerland; Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), Birmensdorf, Switzerland; Department of Geoscience and Remote Sensing, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands
    Sven Kotlarski
    Senior Scientist, Federal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, Zurich, Switzerland
    Fredrik Charpentier Ljungqvist
    Researcher, Department of History and Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Stockholm University, Sweden

    Related scientific sessions: CR1.1/CL3.07, CL4.23, CL1.38/BG2.41, OS4.11, CL5.01
    --
    MARKS OF THE ANTHROPOCENE: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
    Wednesday, 10 April, 09:00

    Many scientists argue we are living in the Anthropocene, a geological epoch shaped by human actions. In this press conference, journalists will hear about marks human activities have left, and continue to leave, on our planet. In one presentation, reporters will find out about a new 3D model of anthropogenic sediments under the city of Vienna, dating back up to more than 2,000 years ago. In another presentation, researchers will show evidence of elevated levels of radionuclides (fallout from Chernobyl and nuclear weapons testing) in glaciers across the globe. Another team will show how pesticides sprayed in crops are leaving residues in honey, pollen and beeswax. Finally, journalists will hear about how climate change and the urban heat island effect may leave the urban poor more exposed to deadly heat in major cities worldwide.

    Participants:
    Kira Lappé
    PhD Student, Department of Geodynamics and Sedimentology, University of Vienna, Austria
    Caroline Clason
    Lecturer in Physical Geography, School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science and Engineering, University of Plymouth, United Kingdom
    Yolanda Picó
    Professor of Nutrition and Food Science, University of Valencia, Spain
    Steffen Lohrey
    Institute for Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning (ILaUP), Technical University of Berlin, Germany

    Related scientific sessions: ITS5.1/SSP2.1/CL3.01/GM6.7/SSS13.32, CR7.2/BG1.49/HS2.3.7, SSS8.5/BG2.67/HS8.3.15, NH1.9/AS4.31
    --
    NEW HAZARDS RESEARCH: ANAK KRAKATAU, GLACIAL LAKES AND GIANT QUAKES
    Wednesday, 10 April, 15:00

    On 22 December 2018, a deadly tsunami struck Indonesia’s Sunda Strait, after activity at Anak Krakatau caused a piece of the western flank of the volcano to collapse to the sea. In this press conference, journalists will hear about new findings on this devastating eruption tsunami. In another presentation, reporters will learn about new research into giant earthquakes, a hazard able to affect large areas. They will find out about the largest quakes to have occurred on our planet, what caused them, and how frequent they may be. Finally, reporters will hear about an often poorly understood hazard in a presentation that will provide the first assessment of glacial lake outburst flood risk across the entire Tibetan Plateau and will identify glacial lakes that pose more of a threat to human settlements.

    Participants:
    David Tappin
    Marine Geologist, British Geological Survey, Nottingham, United Kingdom
    Álvaro González
    Postdoctoral Researcher, Complex Systems Group, Centre de Recerca Matemàtica, Bellaterra (Barcelona), Spain
    Simon Allen
    Researcher, Department of Geography, University of Zurich, Switzerland

    Related scientific sessions: NH2.1/GMPV5.18, NH4.2/SM3.4, ITS4.8/AS4.46/BG1.41/CL3.13/CR1.12/GM5.6
    --
    Note that the list above is subject to change. Please check the press conference page (https://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/press-conferences/), or the information panels at the Vienna Press Centre, for the most up-to-date information.

    MEETING PROGRAMME

    All sessions and side events (over 1000) and abstracts (around 17,000) that make up the programme of the EGU General Assembly are available online on the main website for the meeting: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/meetingprogramme

    The programme is searchable by scientist name, keywords (e.g.: Greenland, turtle), session topic (e.g.: climate, planetary sciences), and other parameters. You can generate your personal programme by selecting single contributions or complete sessions from the meeting programme.

    To provide a better experience for all attendees at its General Assembly, the EGU has made changes to the meeting schedule compared to previous years. The new schedule features posters, orals and PICOs in parallel, uses time blocks of 105 minutes, and includes a dedicated networking slot: https://www.egu.eu/news/446/more-time-for-all-presentation-types-in-the-new-egu-...

    PROGRAMME HIGHLIGHTS

    Of highlight this year is the session ‘Science, politics and European (dis)integration: a conversation of geoscientists with Ilaria Capua and Mario Monti’ at lunchtime on Wednesday 10 April: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/session/33824.

    If you’d like to interview or question Former Italian Prime Minister and European Commissioner Mario Monti and Former Italian Parliamentarian Ilaria Capua after their session is over, please inform the EGU Media and Communications Manager Bárbara Ferreira at media@egu.eu.

    Other Union-wide sessions, including great debates, that could be relevant for media participants are:

    *Past and future tipping points and large climate transitions in Earth history
    *From fundamental Atmospheric Composition Research to Societal Services/30 years of the WMO Global Atmosphere Watch Programme
    *Plastics in the Hydrosphere: An urgent problem requiring global action
    *The safe operating space for the planet and how to ensure it is not passed
    *Plan-S: Should scientific publishers be forced to go Open Access?
    *Science in policymaking: Who is responsible?

    Aside from these sessions, reporters may wish to check the sessions of media relevance selected by the EGU press officer. These sessions include presentations media participants may wish to check while searching for newsworthy research to report on: https://www.egu.eu/meetings/general-assembly/sessions/?session_type=3&limit=...=.

    Reporters may also find the list of papers of public interest, selected by session conveners, useful: https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/abstracts-of-special-interest/hi....

    EGU PUBLIC LECTURE

    For only the second time, the EGU is organising a side event aimed at the wider public in Vienna during the EGU General Assembly. Insa Thiele-Eich, a meteorologist and climate researcher, at the Meteorological Institute, University of Bonn, and an astronaut in training, will give a lecture (in German) titled ‘Vom Alltag zwischen Atmosphäre und Orbit – ein Bericht’. The event will be held at the Vienna Natural History Museum on Thursday 11 April and journalists are invited to attend. For more information, please check the museum's website: https://www.nhm-wien.ac.at/European_Geosciences_Union_Public_Lecture.

    MEDIA REGISTRATION

    Members of the media, public information officers and science bloggers (conditions apply) are now invited to register for the meeting online, free of charge: https://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/registration/eligibility/. Media registration gives access to the Press Centre, interview rooms, and all scientific sessions. It also includes a public transportation ticket for central Vienna, valid from Monday to Friday. At the Press Centre, media participants have access to a working space with a dedicated wireless network and a press conference room. In addition, breakfast, lunch, coffee and refreshments are available free of charge.

    The list of journalist and public information officers who have registered already is available online: https://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/registration/who-is-coming/.

    Online registration is open until tomorrow (14 March 2019). We strongly encourage all media participants to register in advance via this site to facilitate badge collection on arrival to the conference centre, the Austria Center Vienna. You can pick up your badge in the registration counters on Sunday afternoon or all day Monday (from 07:30) to Thursday. You may also register on-site during the meeting.

    Further information about media services at the General Assembly is available at https://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/. Closer to the time of the meeting, this website will feature a full programme of press conferences, which will also be announced in later media advisories. For information on accommodation and travel, please refer to the appropriate sections of the main EGU General Assembly 2019 website: https://www.egu2019.eu/.

    Please note that the Vienna City Marathon (40,000 participants) will take place in Vienna on Sunday, 7 April, resulting in many hotels being fully booked the night before. Furthermore, another large conference is taking place from 9 to 14 April 2019 in Vienna. Therefore, we strongly recommend booking accommodation as soon as possible.

    # # #

    MORE INFORMATION

    The European Geosciences Union (EGU) is Europe’s premier geosciences union, dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in the Earth, planetary, and space sciences for the benefit of humanity, worldwide. It is a non-profit interdisciplinary learned association of scientists founded in 2002 with headquarters in Munich, Germany. The EGU publishes a number of diverse scientific journals, which use an innovative open access format, and organises a number of topical meetings, and education and outreach activities. Its annual General Assembly is the largest and most prominent European geosciences event, attracting over 14,000 scientists from all over the world. The meeting’s sessions cover a wide range of topics, including volcanology, planetary exploration, the Earth’s internal structure and atmosphere, climate, energy, and resources. The EGU General Assembly 2019 is taking place in Vienna, Austria, from 7 to 12 April 2019. For information and press registration, please check https://www.egu.eu/gamedia, or follow the EGU on Twitter (@EuroGeosciences) and Facebook (European Geosciences Union).

    If you wish to receive our press releases via email, please use the Press Release Subscription Form at http://www.egu.eu/news/subscribe/. Subscribed journalists and other members of the media receive EGU press releases under embargo (if applicable) at least 24 hours in advance of public dissemination.


    Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

    Bárbara Ferreira
    EGU Media and Communications Manager
    Munich, Germany
    +49-89-2180-6703
    media@egu.eu
    EGU on Twitter: @EuroGeosciences


    Weitere Informationen:

    http://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/ - EGU General Assembly 2019 media page
    http://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/press-conferences/ - Press conferences 2019
    http://www.egu.eu/gamedia/2019/registration/registration-form/ - Registration form
    http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2019/meetingprogramme - Scientific programme


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