ROOTS is an interdisciplinary humanities project that addresses the issue of forest heritage across the Nordic nations and seeks to build sustainable forest heritage futures.
The goal of RE-FOREST is to improve our understanding of how forest management affects water resources and to find sustainable solutions for the future.
This project aims to investigate how seasonal water availability affects tree growth, water quality, and biodiversity in drained hemiboreal forests, and whether simple, low-cost adaptive drainage solutions can help mitigate these impacts.
The REFORMED projects objective is understanding the interplay of environmental pressures, silviculture, and bark beetle dynamics across tree to landscape levels.
Perennial crops like Kernza could reshape agriculture as we know it. In the Nordic-Baltic region, researchers are testing how this climate-friendly grain can deliver both food and feed while improving soil health and biodiversity.
The world is in turmoil, and the Nordic countries have moved closer together. But if we do not succeed in strengthening co-operation in areas such as research and seize the opportunity now that it presents itself, when will we do so? asks Johan Strang, Professor of Nordic Studies at the University of Helsinki.
The world’s push for clean energy depends on critical minerals such as lithium and rare earth elements. But while they are essential to cutting emissions, their extraction often threatens fragile environments and Indigenous livelihoods.