Office of Polar Programs Budget
The polar regions, key elements and possible drivers of the global climate system, are natural laboratories for various fundamental phenomena that cannot be studied elsewhere. They offer important opportunities for environmental research. The extreme sensitivity of polar ecosystems to changes in climate enables the study
of the links between the physical and living components of coupled earth systems. A key goal of
these studies is to predict climate change and its impacts on a regional scale. Polar research also offers opportunities for fundamental advances in each of the disciplinary sciences, ranging from the behavior of the Earth’s inner core to the formation of galaxies, from the biology of life in the cold and dark to how Arctic residents are affected by environmental change.
OPP provides primary U.S. support for fundamental research in polar regions and broadens basic observations of Arctic and Antarctic systems — including land, ice, atmosphere, ocean, social/human systems, and the natural records of those systems. These observations will enable us to better understand the components, interrelationships, and overall functioning of these systems. Increased observations, analysis, and polar systems research are critical for understanding global climate phenomena.
OFFICE OF POLAR PROGRAMS — FISCAL YEAR 2013 BUDGET
OPP's FY 2013 Budget Request is influenced by four key priorities:
- maintaining strong disciplinary programs that provide a base for our investments in cross-disciplinary system science programs;
- strengthening U.S. research community activities in polar system science;
- supporting critical facilities that enable research in the Earth's polar regions; and
- enabling scientific leadership in research in polar
regions that is aligned with the NSF-wide investments in Science, Engineering, and Education for
Sustainability (SEES) and Cyberinfrastructure Framework for 21st Century Science and Engineering
(CIF21).
These priorities reflect opportunities for fundamental scientific discovery uniquely available in
polar regions, as well as studies to investigate the causes and future trajectory of changes now being
observed at the poles that could impact global systems. This work will implement the Foundation's leadagency
role in facilitating the Nation's investment in polar science, where environmental change in parts
of the Arctic and Antarctic is occurring faster than anywhere else in the world, and has a wide variety of
regional and global impacts. Research supported by OPP will elucidate the causes and likely impacts of
these changes, thus providing a sound basis for future policy decisions.
The full Fiscal Year 2013 budget request for the Office of Polar Programs and for related activities are available at the following links. Budget requests and appropriations for previous years may be obtained on the NSF budget page.
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Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, Dark Sector. The row of red objects in the lower left corner is the IceCube drill camp.To the left of the camp is the IceCube laboratory, the blue building with two silver towers. The South Pole 10-meter Telescope is in the upper left corner. The building at top center is the Martin A. Pomerantz Observatory (MAPO) building. All these facilities contain telescopes examining the origins of the universe. (NSF/USAP photo by Andrew Williams.) |
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