
Gonçalo Vieira, a professor at IGOT-ULisboa, was appointed as Co-President of the International Permafrost Association (IPA) in Whitehorse, Canada. He will hold this position for the next four years alongside Isabelle Gartner-Roer from the University of Zurich.
Gonçalo Vieira’s appointment to lead a committee with 29 member countries is a recognition of the robustness of permafrost research conducted by Portugal in both the Antarctic and Arctic regions. Promoting scientific research and engineering to help solve problems associated with permafrost in a scenario of global environmental crisis and significant geopolitical complexity will be the guiding principle of this joint presidency.
The IPA was established in 1983 with the aim of promoting scientific research on permafrost and international collaboration. Since then, changes in permafrost environments have seen a worrying acceleration, and permafrost has become increasingly significant in the context of global climate change. Permafrost is a central element in the global climate system, particularly because of its importance in the carbon cycle and for methane and carbon dioxide emissions.
However, the problems associated with permafrost degradation are very broad, with implications for high-latitude ecosystems, hydrology, coastal dynamics, contaminant flows, as well as for infrastructure and the ways of life of indigenous and local communities in the Arctic.






