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Newsletter Oktober 2025
Donnerstag, 14. August 2025

Climate Change Graz

Zero Emissions Award

 

13.10.2025 - Biodiversität in der Landwirtschaft

 

14.10.2025 ERC Starting Grant

>> zum Template

 

16.10.2025 Simons Collaborations in Ecology and Evolution

The Simons Foundation’s Life Sciences division is now seeking vision statements to identify new, emerging breakthrough areas of ecology and evolution that are poised for high-impact funding by the Simons Foundation. As a guideline, budgets of between $1–4 million USD per year, inclusive of twenty percent indirect costs are suggested.

 

21.10.2025 COST Open Call 2025 & Beteiligung an neu bewilligten COST-Actions

 

30.10.2025 Frontiers Planet Prize

The Frontiers Planet Prize (worth 1 Mio Swiss Francs!) will be awarded to the best research in the areas of Climate change, Stratospheric ozone depletion, Loss of biosphere integrity, Chemical pollution, Atmospheric aerosol loading, Ocean acidification, Freshwater consumption, Land system change and Novel entities published in established peer-reviewed scientific journals, with robust peer review and transparent publication procedures. If you are interested in an application, please use the application form and send it together with the publication to the FMS till Oct 20 2025 since the official nomination must be submitted by Uni Graz.

 

5.11.2025 ERC Synergy Grant

>> zum Template

 

10.11.2025 Stefan M. Gergely-Preis für Doktorand:innen im Bereich Biodiversitätsforschung & Stefan M. Gergely-Stipendien für Biodiversität

 

12.11.2025 - Energieforschung 2025 (FFG) - 2. Einreichfrist

 

17.11.2025 Driving Urban Transitions Partnerschaft (DUT)

Einreichungen zu folgenden thematischen Bereichen: 1) The 15-minute City, 2) Circular Urban Economies, 3) Positive Energy Districts sind möglich.

25.11.2025 Horizon Europe: MSCA Doctoral Networks

MSCA Doctoral Networks (DN) sind internationale, innovative Ausbildungsprogramme für Doktorand:innen, die auf einem gemeinsamen Forschungsprojekt basieren. 

 

28.11.2025 GAIA Masters Student Paper Award

 

30.11.2025 - Kooperation Entwicklungsforschung (OeAD)

 

13.1.2026 ERC Consolidator Grant

Die ERC-Proposal-Templates (hier zum Download) wurden im ERC-Arbeitsprogramm 2026 im Vergleich zu den letzten Jahren adaptiert. So darf der Teil B2 nur mehr 7 statt vormals 14 Seiten umfassen.

 

6.5.2026 EIC Pathfinder Open
 

27.8.2026 ERC Advanced Grant

 

16.9.2026 EIC Transition


28.10.2026 EIC Pathfinder Challenges

 

>> zur Liste der offenen Calls 

14.10. 17:00 | Der Einfluss des Menschen auf den Kohlenstoffkreislauf – Wie viel CO2 verträgt die Atmosphäre? 

 

25.11. ClimLaw@5 

 

28.11. 14:00 | HS 02.23 (Universitätsplatz 2) | Deep Groundwater and Deep Time - Dr. Grant Ferguson (University of Saskatchewan) 

Darcy Lecture organized by the Department of Earth Sciences

The volume of continental groundwater is enormous, rivalling the amount found in ice sheets. Fluxes from groundwater to surface water are responsible for generating a substantial portion of streamflow globally but these fluxes are dominated by relatively shallow groundwaters (<500 m deep) and have short residence times. Deeper groundwaters are responsible for generating only a small amount of streamflow and a disproportionate amount of depletion of storage relative to streamflow capture tends to occur when they are pumped. The relative isolation of deeper groundwater systems has made these environments a target for carbon sequestration, disposal of produced waters from the oil and gas industry and nuclear waste isolation. However, despite the small fluxes of water between deep groundwater and the rest of the hydrologic cycle, geochemical fluxes can be substantial due to the elevated concentrations of many elements in deep groundwater. Deep groundwaters also contain microbial ecosystems that make up a considerable amount of the Earth’s biomass. Studying these systems is challenging not only due to the fewer windows into deeper subsurface but also because of the different processes and time scales that should be considered. While topography-driven flow still dominates many deep groundwater systems, variations in fluid density and various geological processes can drive fluid flow. Boundary conditions need to consider shifts in climate and geologic forcings over long time periods and, in some cases, changes in the flow system geometry, notably due to burial and denudation.  Improving our understanding of this frontier of hydrology will require new approaches, new tools and collaboration with other disciplines in the geosciences and beyond.

Grant Ferguson is a professor of hydrogeology in the Department of Civil, Geological and Environmental Engineering at the University of Saskatchewan. He also holds a joint appointment in the School of Environment and Sustainability at the University of Saskatchewan and is an adjunct professor at the University of Arizona and University of Waterloo. Ferguson holds a B.Sc. from the University of Waterloo and a Ph.D. from the University of Manitoba. His research focuses on the hydrogeology of deep groundwater systems, paleohydrogeology, the hydrogeology of the Canadian Prairies and sustainable development of groundwater resources. Ferguson is currently vice president, North America for the International Association of Hydrogeologists and has served as President of their Canadian National Chapter. He is also an associate editor for the journal Groundwater. 

>> More on the Darcy Lecture 

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