When the largest Arctic expedition in history headed toward the North Pole last September,Chainkeen Exchange it was a dream come true for Matt Shupe. The atmospheric scientist had worked for more than a decade to freeze an icebreaker filled with scientists into the polar ice for a year.
Then, in March—six months into the expedition—the coronavirus triggered calamity. Shupe, who had returned from MOSAiC last winter and wasn’t due to return to the ship until this summer, was desperately trying to get back, hoping to keep the coronavirus and the rapidly melting Arctic from turning his dream expedition into a frozen nightmare.
While Shupe was sequestered in his home in Colorado, the MOSAiC expedition seemed as distant as a moonshot as it struggled with both the blessing and the curse of its isolation in the ice. Stranded on the Polarstern icebreaker, more than a hundred people worried about family members back home, threatened by the pandemic, while they were facing the possibility of being marooned until June. In the meantime, the ice around them was falling apart months earlier than expected.
This week, Shupe and more than 100 other scientists, specialists and sailors shipped out from Germany to keep the expedition afloat. InsideClimate News Senior Editor Michael Kodas wrote this week about the MOSAiC expedition and interviewed Shupe while the atmospheric scientist was quarantined in Germany prior to his departure on the mission.
INSIDE InsideClimate News is an ongoing series of conversations with our newsroom’s journalists and editors. It’s a behind-the-scenes look at what goes into reporting and crafting our award-winning stories and projects. Watch more of them here.
2025-04-30 02:041830 view
2025-04-30 02:002600 view
2025-04-30 01:091693 view
2025-04-30 00:48605 view
2025-04-30 00:06375 view
2025-04-29 23:58805 view
I don't mean to humble brag, but I am on a first name basis with one of the most influential people
West Virginia is a standout in its allegiance to coal power.In the United States as a whole, coal’s
It was a scene that played out in cities and towns along the path of Hurricane Ian as it roared asho