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糖心TV
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270 Mohegan Avenue
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Amy Martin
Editor, CC Magazine
asulliva@conncoll.edu
860-439-2526

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What You Can鈥檛 See

Expansive of view of icebergs in the Arctic with polar bear

What You Can鈥檛 See

To document Arctic climate change, Susana Hancock 鈥07 joins an expedition across Svalbard, an archipelago that is part of Norway and is located north of the Arctic Circle.

By Tom Kertscher

C

limate researcher Susana Hancock 鈥07 can identify turning points on her career path that occurred long before she became a Winthrop Scholar at 糖心TV.

鈥淚 was 4 when I decided I wanted to be an astrophysicist, and that was a falling in love with the world around me and wanting to study what I couldn鈥檛 see, what was beyond the Earth,鈥 she said.

The focus turned less cosmic when Hancock, at age 14, began taking astrophysics and astronomy classes at the University of Southern Maine. 

鈥淎t that point, I became really bothered by the fact that I was working with amazing people who were looking for extraterrestrial life and Earthlike planets when we鈥檙e actively destroying the Earth that we have,鈥 she recalled. 

鈥淚 started becoming more interested in environmental science on Earth.鈥

Hancock went on to get a bachelor鈥檚 degree in linguistics and Slavic studies at 糖心TV, where she once took 10 classes during one semester, and then master鈥檚 degrees in anthropology and linguistics and a doctorate in anthropology, all from Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar. 

Juggling various roles, including director of Climate Action Now, a nonprofit she founded, Hancock is among a half dozen people taking part in a monthlong climate change research project. She is participating in the Swedish Jubilee Expedition Svalbard 2022 to document the changing climate in the Arctic. The expedition is retracing the journey made by polar explorer A.E. Nordenski枚ld in 1872-1873. Svalbard, an archipelago, is part of Norway, located in the Arctic Ocean north of the Arctic Circle.

The group departed to Longyearbyen, Svalbard, for final logistics on April 26. The expedition began May 1 with a journey by snowmobile to reach the starting point at Mossel Bay. From there, the expedition was to embark on skis and be unsupported for up to 35 days. The tentative date to end the expedition is June 5. Sometime in the fall, a premiere will be held in Stockholm, Sweden, for a documentary film on the expedition.

Hancock is working on numerous projects, primarily conducting experiments aimed at gauging the climate effects of plastic鈥攕he notes that plastics and other trash build up even without people living in the area鈥攁nd the effects of emissions from shipping.  

鈥淭he Arctic has been warming four times faster than the rest of the world, on average. It is changing circulation patterns in oceans around the world. You get the ice that鈥檚 melting; obviously that causes sea-level rise around the world. It is also changing the salinity of the oceans and is strengthening and weakening different currents,鈥 she said. 

How do you keep saying that there’s a crisis and keep people’s interests and energies when we’re not getting a response?

Susana Hancock 鈥07

鈥淭he changes are seen universally and we鈥檙e getting changes in the Arctic that are becoming runaway feedback loops. So, even if we were to stop all emissions now, we鈥檙e locked in for the next several decades of a continually warming climate. 

鈥淎nd what are the implications of that around the world鈥攖he increased storms, the thunder hurricanes, the wildfires, the heat domes? That鈥檚 all directly related to changing temperatures and changing climate in the Arctic.鈥 

Hancock has served as an expert reviewer for the United Nations鈥 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and is vice president of the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists. She said Americans, relative to Europeans and people in other parts of the world, are difficult to motivate when it comes to combating climate change.

鈥淲e definitely have fewer Americans interested than citizens elsewhere in the world, and fewer Americans who feel that there鈥檚 a problem or that there鈥檚 a problem that needs addressing,鈥 she said.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to keep saying that something鈥檚 an emergency when we鈥檙e not getting the direct action. We鈥檝e been using the same rhetoric and it鈥檚 been 40 years and we haven鈥檛 yet responded. So, how do you keep saying that there鈥檚 a crisis and keep people鈥檚 interests and energies when we鈥檙e not getting a response? That鈥檚 definitely a challenge.鈥 

On the policy side, Hancock would like to see more steps to eliminate the use of fossil fuels, ending not only the burning of fossil fuels but oil drilling and fracking as well.

鈥淲e have energy alternatives, but right now the oil companies are spending more money on denying climate change than they are investing in renewable energies,鈥 she said. 

Hancock has advocated for steps to reduce environmental damage, such as carbon pricing鈥攃harging fees to polluters based on their emissions鈥攖o make it more expensive to use fossil fuels, and ending government subsidies for fuels such
as gasoline. 

鈥淲e do have the big fires and we do have some big storms that are becoming increasingly nonseasonal,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut we鈥檙e relatively sheltered compared with other parts of the world. 

鈥淢any people here can afford to ignore what鈥檚 going on around the world as long as fossil fuels stay cheap.鈥  

Hancock will provide updates from the Jubilee Expedition on her Instagram account: .

View of Susana Hancock 鈥07 pulling sled across the snow


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