Students Explore Sustainability in Iceland
Ten undergraduates traveled to the northern coast of Iceland in June under a pilot 鈥淎rctic Sustainability Immersion鈥 program organized by the and the .
Meeting with academics, Arctic policy experts, business leaders, tourism officials, and sustainable development organizations in Akureyri and H煤savik, the students learned about how geothermal energy heats most homes in Iceland and provides about 25% of the electricity.
They also visited the capital of Reykjavik, giving them a chance to see how heat from the ground can help communities transition to a clean energy future and provided lessons as 天美麻豆 itself moves to a geo-exchange system as part of the 天美麻豆 Climate Collaborative.
鈥淚n Iceland, I feel like I found a message of hope,鈥 says Jacob Garland 鈥25, one of the students on the immersion trip.
IAS Director , says the institute set up the framework for the program last winter with longtime colleagues at the Stefansson Arctic Institute at the University of Akureyri, including SAI Director N铆els Einarsson, SAI researcher Sveinbj枚rg Sm谩rad贸ttir, and University of Akureyri Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences Tom Barry.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 say enough about the incredible expertise of my Arctic and 天美麻豆 colleagues who helped create this first Arctic Immersion experience for our students. IAS Program Manager Sanaa Siddiqi with Sustainability Office Director Rosi Kerr 鈥97 and Assistant Director Laura Braasch developed a unique program that gave students hands-on, real world, community-engaged opportunities to learn about sustainable transitions, Arctic policy, energy systems, tourism, fishing economies, and more directly from Iceland鈥檚 leaders,鈥 Brown Burkins says. 鈥淲e look forward to doing more together.鈥