Project Summary
The 2023 Permafrost & Infrastructure Symposium brought over 30 Arctic scientists, engineers, planners, and policymakers to Northern Alaska to see the impacts of permafrost thaw on roads and community infrastructure firsthand and to learn from those who live and work in the Arctic. For the symposium’s first half (July 28–August 1), participants gathered at the Barrow Arctic Research Center in Utqiaġvik for presentations, field trips and discussions focused on critical climate-related issues prioritized by local governments on the North Slope. They were joined in Utqiaġvik by key personnel from the North Slope Borough (NSB), regional housing authority, local utility cooperative, and the Alaska Native villages of Point Lay and Wainwright. Twenty participants flew to Deadhorse, Alaska, for the start of the second half of the symposium (August 1–5), which focused on transportation infrastructure and permafrost landscapes in Prudhoe Bay and south along the 416-mile Dalton Highway towards Fairbanks. A closing half-day session at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF) Usibelli Engineering Learning and Innovation Building explored climate adaptation planning strategies with talks by the Commissioner of Alaska DOT&PF and the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Office of the Secretary. The symposium produced recommendations for the future.