Title: Blue Template for Slide Presentations
133rd IGC International Consortium of Geological
Surveys
An Integrated Strategy for Government-Sponsored
Science Mark Myers, Director U.S. Geological
Survey11 August 2008
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological
Survey
U.S. Department of the Interior U.S. Geological
Survey
2Night light produced largely from fossil fuels
An index of population and human power in the
environment
NASA
Night light produced largely from fossil fuels
Lots of Us Using Lots of Stuff!
3 Human-induced changes on a global scale
Rising demand for resources Approaching
thresholds of ecosystems Scientific knowledge is
essential for a sustainable society
4Ecosystem Services
Goods and services of value to humans that come
from natural systems Not well integrated into
decision making Not fully valued in economic
discussions, societal decisions Markets are
insufficient to convey benefits of ecosystems
5Finding balance - environment and people
6Science a bridge to rational solutions
7The Relevance of National Surveys
Authoritative, unbiased Accessible
Extensive national and global observation
networks and databases require a national
commitment Historical perspective essential for
information continuity and archival
Decision support tools Partnerships optimize
science resources, build consensus
8USGS Science Strategy
9Circum-Arctic Resources Assessment
- First publicly available petroleum resource
estimate of the entire area north of the
Arctic Circle released 23 July - Conducted with international partners
- Geological Survey of Canada
- Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland
- U.S. Minerals Management Service
- Norwegian Petroleum Directorate
- USGS World Energy Consortium
- Cambridge Arctic Shelves Programme
10Polar bears and a changing Arctic
- USGS science findings contributed to the DOI
decision to list polar bears as a threatened
species 1. Sea ice is vital to polar bear
survival 2. Sea ice habitat has dramatically
melted in recent decades 3. Models suggest sea
is ice likely to further recede in the future - USGS studies other impacts of changing Arctic
conditions - Other Arctic species
- Recoverability of energy resources
- Law Of The Sea issues
11Great Southern California Shakeout
12Toward future geological surveys
- New frontiers for Geological Surveys
- Beyond traditional categories of natural
resources - Assess energy alternatives
- Consider societal resilience
- Expand as vital sources for science information