
Warmer Oceans Are Changing the Season for Harmful Algal Blooms
There is an increased need for monitoring and adaptationOur Research Areas
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Our researchers are employed either at NORCE, UiB, the Nansen Center or the Institute of Marine Research. The researchers work together across various scientific disciplines. Find researchers with backgrounds in meteorology, oceanography, geology, geophysics, biology and mathematics, among others.
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Researchers at Bjerknes are involved in several projects, both nationally and internationally. The projects are owned by the partner institutions, with the exception of our strategic projects.
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Researchers at the Bjerknes Center publish more than 200 scientific articles each year.
Popular Science
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11.07.25
Loss of sea ice stabilizes Atlantic circulation
The risk of a slowdown of the overturning circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean is lower than previously thought. New research suggests increased deep water formation in ice-free regions of the Arctic Ocean will keep the wheel spinning.

03.07.25
Lise Øvreås Elected as New President of EASAC
Lise Øvreås stepped down last year as President of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters. Now she is taking over as President of EASAC, a coalition of 30 science academies from across Europe.

24.06.25
Warmer Oceans Are Changing the Season for Harmful Algal Blooms
Especially in spring and autumn, we may see more of blooms of algae causing stomach issues, according to a new study of algae blooms along the Norwegian coast.
Events
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18.08.25
Seminar: "Enhanced El Niño predictability from climate mode interactions" by Tamas Bodai
The next BCCR Monday Seminar will be given by Tamas Bodai from the Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences. He will present his work on "Enhanced El Niño predictability from climate mode interactions". The seminar will take place in the usual BCCR seminar room (4th floor of the West wing) at 11:00. Abstract The conceptual XRO model (XROM) introduced recently by Zhao et al. (Nature, 2024) has been extended by including state dependence of the external noise forcing on ENSO as well as a seasonal modulation of both the additive and state-dependent parts of the forcing. These features of the forecast model, the XDROM+, require the use of Maximum Likelihood Estimation for parameter inference, which is much more costly than fitting the XROM to data by linear regression via matrix inversion. Yet, it pays, yielding the best ENSO forecast skill yet. In the talk, I will also make a few points of caveat via introducing and discussing four concepts, those of the apparent, theoretical maximum, climatological, and true prediction skills. Most importantly, I explain that (i) the true skill—unlike the apparent skill determined from historical data—cannot be defined by a correlation coefficient and demonstrate that (ii) the said two types of skill do not correlate across possible realisations of the statistical process generated by the XDROM+. https://rdcu.be/exnN4 Speaker information Short biography Tamas Bodai Graduated as a mechanical engineer, with a keen interest in mathematics, I’m now doing research into climate change. https://www.linkedin.com/in/tamas-bodai-65236261/

29.09.25
Bjerknes Annual Meeting
The program will be announced in due time. Please mark your calendars!

28.11.25