Dressed up as iceberg
Warming up to the Copenhagen COP15 in December, the North Atlantic House has shrouded itself in an icy garment. A translucent screen imprinted with photographic reproductions of ice covers the waterfront end of the building, giving the appearance from a distance that it has rammed into and is being engulfed by a towering iceberg. The 21 meters high and approximately 4000 square meter installation entitled ”The Tip of the Iceberg” is the work of artist Inuk Silis Høegh. It was inaugurated on Friday 20 November in an event that took place outside the North Atlantic House and included speeches by the Icelandic ambassador to Denmark Svavar Gestsson and head of the Faroese Representation Herálvur Joensen, followed by handing of flowers to the artist and serving of hot drinks steaming between hands in the cooling late afternoon November air. In the fading daylight, projectors illuminated the installation from below and the appurtenant soundtrack began playing gentle sounds of ice sighing, cracking, being lapped by waves, and melting, dripping and trickling. And so the installation or the strange - part iceberg, part warehouse - edifice conveyed its double message to the people gathered on the pier, that of a majestic, invincible Arctic, and, at the same time, that of a fragile and threatened one. In a way, the renovated 18th century warehouse in itself sends out a similar kind of mixed and restless signals by being the pure product and a clear-cut symbol of colonial enterprise in the North Atlantic and Arctic regions that, however, nowadays seems to have been almost completely inverted and taken over by emissaries of the former colonies. 
During COP15, it will host two parallel event venues, one of which is the Greenland Representation organised event entitled In the Eye of Climate Change, while the other is the Venue Arctic under the auspices of the Danish Energy Agency. Both comprise a number of exhibition stands, speeches, panel debates, workshops, and film screenings centring on the overall themes of climate change mitigation and adaptation, and on the various ways and discourses on how to relate to these issues. Independent of each other and yet coordinated, the two events seem to have agreed on a certain division of labour. The In the Eye of Climate Change event thus focuses on Greenlandic issues and applies a mainly socio-economic, and human interest angle, whereas the Arctic Venue programme weighs scientific, Arctic Council Working Group approaches. Both venues open to the public on Saturday 12 December. However, a closed vernissage of the Greenland Representation organised exhibition will take place the day before, on Friday 11 December. On this occasion, the official inauguration will be performed by his Majesty Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark. Greenland Premier Kuupik Kleist will host the event that also features artistic performances as well as the serving of traditional Greenlandic food.
Films and all at the Copenhagen SAO



The first Senior Arctic Officials (SAO) meeting of the Arctic Council under the Danish Chairmanship was held in Copenhagen on November 12-13, 2009. Over 200 participants came together for two days of intensive discussions on a wide variety of issues important to the Arctic.
SAO Chair, Ambassador Lars Møller noted in his opening speech that there was a steadily increasing amount of activity in the Arctic. To address the huge challenges, Lars Møller said, the council brought with it from its previous ministerial meeting an ambitious agenda in the form of the Tromsø Declaration. The initial phase of the meeting, unorthodoxly, included the screening of working copies of two films presenting the AMAP organized Greenland Ice Sheet (GRIS) and Arctic Cryosphere (SWIPA) projects. The GRIS film will also form part of a high profiled side event at the upcoming COP15 entitled Melting Snow and Ice to be attended by the Danish/Greenlandic and Norwegian foreign ministers as well as by former US vice-president and Oscar winner Al Gore. Apart from COP 15 and the SWIPA project, the SAO agenda comprised, i.a., discussions of the work with establishing new Task Forces on Search and Rescue and on Short-lived Climate Forcers, maintaining and strengthening observing and monitoring initiatives, and International Polar Year Legacy initiatives such as the The Oslo Science Conference to be held in June next year. The Aleut International Association Executive Director Victoria Gofman made a presentation of the Bering Sea Sub Network (BSSN) that was implemented by AIA as an International Polar Year project under the auspices of CAFF and with the participation of 6 indigenous Bering Strait communities. Thanks to a 3 million dollar grant from the US National Science Foundation, Ms. Gofman explained, Phase 2 of this project will be carried out during the next 5 years and will involve 10 communities on either side of the Bering Strait. Measures to identify potential gaps and to eliminate duplication of work were treated in a section dedicated to the effectiveness and efficiency of the Arctic Council. Various initiatives to strengthen the political role of the Arctic Council, enhance information exchange among the council’s stakeholders, and to develop guidelines for communication and outreach were presented by the chair during this section Japan was welcomed as an ad hoc observer of the Arctic Council. Japan has applied for permanent Observer status, however, until its application can be processed in connection with the next Ministerial meeting, it will join the existing group of Ad Hoc Observers to the Arctic Council. In the evening of the first SAO meeting day, Second Secretary at the Japanese Embassy in Copenhagen, Ms. Emi Mashiko, attended a meeting with the Permanent Participant to discuss how Japan as an Observer and the Permanent Participants can benefit from each other’s work within the Arctic Council. The meeting also saw status updates by and on a number of non-Arctic Council groups and projects such as the Danish Arctic Megatrends study, the Arctic Governance project, the 4 (i.e., Arctic, Barents, Baltic, and Nordic) Councils of the North, as well as the University of the Arctic. The next Arctic Council SAO Meeting will be held in Illulissat, Greenland on April 28-29, 2010.
Arctic Parliamentarians come together to discuss Arctic Ocean

JT




