University Of Copenhagen News

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Major Gas Supplier Norway Closely Monitoring Baltic Sea Pipe Burst Probe

cooperation between the military and the energy industry.However, "a key bottleneck continues to be surveillance, monitoring and information sharing, both between civil and military actors, states and in the region," Christian Bueger, a professor of international relations at the University of Copenhagen, said. "NATO doesn't have any credible means to reciprocate, other than speeding the work on critical maritime infrastructure protection and surveillance," he added.Balticconnector map https://tmsnrt.rs/3FegRZS(Reuters - Reporting by Nerijus Adomaitis and Nora Buli; editing

© pingvin57 / Adobe Stock

Kremlin’s Threat to Interfere with Undersea Data Cables Should Be Taken Seriously

threat, the protection of critical maritime infrastructures, which also includes wind farms, power cables, hydrogen pipelines and carbon storage projects, needs to become a defining feature in the global ocean governance agenda.The authorChristian Bueger, Professor of International Relations, University of Copenhagen(Source: The Conversation

OPTION Attracts New Partner for Oil Recovery

exploitation and knowledge transfer. This €3.9 million project is a collaboration between industry partners Lloyd’s Register Energy, and its consulting business - Lloyd’s Register Consulting; LR Senergy; Welltec; DONG Energy; the Technical University of Denmark (DTU); and the University of Copenhagen. It is supported by a €2 million grant from the Innovation Fund Denmark. Dr Kenny Krogh Nielsen, Chairman of the OPTION Steering Committee and Team Leader at Lloyd’s Register Consulting states: “DONG Energy’s participation marks a decisive step for OPTION. By applying

Extreme Sampling: Hadal Trenches

of some of the deepest oceanic trenches on Earth. An international team of researchers, led by Prof Ronnie N Glud from University of Southern Denmark (DK), and including scientists from Max Planck Institute for Marine Micribiology (G), Scottish Association of Marine Sciences (UK) and the University of Copenhagen (DK), will take the innovative step of studying and sampling deep-sea organisms in their own environment (in-situ).  To achieve this, the Hades project requires two purpose-built robots, a profiling lander and sediment sampler (which will have two different modes), to operate at depths

Surge picture from November 9, 2007 (Image courtesy of NOC)

Sea Level Rise ‘Worst Case Scenario’

research is a crucial topic in environmental science, and this study provides further insight in predicting the range of sea level rise toward the end of the century." The study was carried out in conjunction with Aslak Grinsted from Centre for Ice and Climate, Niels Bohr Institute, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark and John C. Moore from State Key Laboratory of Earth Surface Processes and Resource Ecology, College of Global Change and Earth System Science, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.  

PiE 2014 Keynote Speakers Revealed

On October 7, 2014, Sequoia Scientific, MacArtney Underwater Technology and University of Copenhagen will open the doors to the fourth edition of Particles in Europe (PiE). The organizers revealed that Professor Daniel Hanes of St. Louis University (U.S.A.) and Professor Colin Jago of Bangor University (U.K.) as keynote speakers at the conference. While Daniel Hanes will elaborate on the confounding effects of particle characteristics on acoustic backscatter measuring techniques, Colin Jago will talk about SPM dynamics in a region of freshwater influence (Liverpool Bay). Together, these talks are

Study: Rising Sea Level Puts 150 Million at Risk

heritage, unique beaches and cliffs.” “Trends and acceleration in global and regional sea levels since 1807” was published in the Global and Planetary Change journal and coauthored by Dr. Jevrejeva and JC Moore from the Beijing Normal University in China, A Grinsted from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, AP Matthews from NOC and G Spada from the Dipartimento di Scienze di Base e Fondamenti, Università degli Studi “Carlo Bo” in Urbino, Italy. The study looked at global sea level reconstruction based on 1,277 tide gauge records dating from 1807 to 2010. Tide

Photo courtesy National Oceanography Centre

Study: Rising Sea Level Puts 150 Million at Risk

, unique beaches and cliffs.”  “Trends and acceleration in global and regional sea levels since 1807” was published in the Global and Planetary Change journal and coauthored by Dr. Jevrejeva and JC Moore from the Beijing Normal University in China, A Grinsted from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark, AP Matthews from NOC and G Spada from the Dipartimento di Scienze di Base e Fondamenti, Università degli Studi “Carlo Bo” in Urbino, Italy. The study looked at global sea level reconstruction based on 1,277 tide gauge records dating from 1807 to 2010. Tide

Photo: MacArtney

MacArtney to Distribute LISST Instruments

have already been working together on the German market for more than 10 years. Furthermore, MacArtney has in-house LISST expertise in the shape of System Sales Manager, Ole Aarup Mikkelsen, who worked six years with Sequoia prior to joining MacArtney. In October 2014, Sequoia, MacArtney and University of Copenhagen will team up to organize the fourth edition of Particles in Europe (PiE) - a bi-annual conference focusing on particles in the aquatic environment.  

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