In order to strengthen its leading position in climate research Bern University has opened a new competence centre in October 2007 to combine all its expertise. The Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research aims to encourage a multidisciplinary approach to the study of climate change and its consequences for the environment and society.
Hans Oeschger was an internationally renowned physicist
The new research centre is named after the environment physicist Hans Oeschger who died in 1998. The Bernese scientist developed among other things methods to drill and analyse the ice core. Oeschger's discovery that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere had increased by about 30 per cent over the past 250 years as a result of the burning of coal, oil and natural gas made him not only a founder of climate research, but also gave Bern University a leading role in this field. He was troubled by the potentially adverse consequences of an increased greenhouse effect caused by the steady rise in atmospheric C02 and was not afraid to voice his fears.Oeschger gave many public lectures on the subject of climate change and was also a lead author of the First Assessment Report of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
«Strengthen those areas in which we are already doing top international research»
«With the new centre, we want to further strengthen those areas in which we are already doing top international research», Bern geography professor Martin Grosjean told swissinfo. They include ice core research in Antarctica and Greenland, or climate reconstruction, fields where there is strong competition, he added. Grosjean, who is the executive director of the National Centre of Excellence in Research on Climate at Bern University, will take up the same function at the Oeschger Centre, which officially opened in October 2007. The university wants to catch up in some areas, including in disciplines such as climate economy and social science. Grosjean explained that the questions of the costs of climate change and dealing with the risks it entails had come to the fore of discussions. Heinz Wanner, director of the National Competence Centre of Climate Reseach, told swissinfo that this kind of approach was not unique but special. «If you look at the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change it is said that there has to be cooperation between natural science - biology, economy, law and so on. But there are not too many universities in Europe which are performing such programmes. In a certain sense it is unique that certain universities like Bern are starting such a programme,» he explained.
New professors
Wanner added that Bern's reputation also acted as a magnet when it came to funding programmes.
Bern University already offers a two-year master's course, which is carried out in cooperation with the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich. Just 20 students enter the international programme annually after passing a stringent selection process.
«Bern is a competitive location and is regarded as such,» Grosjean pointed out. Graduates of the master's degree may one day tread in the footsteps of leading Bernese climate researchers Wanner, Thomas Stocker and others. Their research formed a basis for Al Gore's successful documentary, «An Inconvenient Truth», which earned the former United States vice-president an Oscar. «We were very surprised at the reactions the film generated because the facts were partly known for many years,» Grosjean said.
(Swissinfo, 9 october 2007, based on an article in German)
Link to the whole article.
Picture shows Swiss climate pioneer Hans Oeschger in Greenland in 1967 (Bernhard Stauffer)
Nobel Peace Prize 2007 with Swiss contribution
Universities
This year’s Nobel Peace Prize goes to Al Gore and all the members of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Among those honoured are a number of Swiss scientists, including University of Berne climatologist and professor Thomas Stocker. This success builds on the work of his predecessor, Berne-based environmental physicist Hans Oeschger.
Science 
