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Cryosphere Science Concluding in new Observations and Productive Exploitation (CryoSCOPE)

  • Duration: 2025 - 2029
  • Status: Ongoing

CryoSCOPE is a Horizon Europe project improving knowledge of cryosphere–atmosphere–hydrosphere processes and their sensitivity to climate change.

Basic project information

Project management
Kirsikka Heinilä (Syke), Rakesh Hooda (FMI)
Project team
Sari Metsämäki, Emilia Söderström, Timo Pyhälahti, Jesse Anttila and Hanna Alasalmi
Financiers
Horizon Europe
Partners
Finnish Meteorological Institute (FMI), Finnish Environment Institute (Syke), University of Oulu, CSC – IT Center for Science, ETH Zurich, Austrian Academy of Sciences (ÖAW), Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), The University Centre in Svalbard (UNIS), FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, University of Kashmir, Ministry of Earth Sciences (India), Landsvirkjun, Muon Solutions, Metsäteho Oy, Ammattiopisto Lappia
Subject area
International, Research, Environmental information
CryoSCOPE logo
CryoSCOPE logo

Project summary

CryoSCOPE is a Horizon Europe Research and Innovation Action (RIA) project aimed at understanding and quantifying the physical and chemical processes within the coupled Cryosphere–Atmosphere–Hydrosphere (CAH) system across diverse cold-region landscapes, including Czechia, Finnish Lapland, Iceland, the Indian Himalayas, the Swiss Alps, Norway, and Svalbard. The project seeks improved comprehension of how land ice, snow, and permafrost interact with atmospheric and hydrological systems, and evaluate their sensitivity to climate change in these regions.  


CryoSCOPE brings together a global consortium of 20 partners across 9 countries of researchers and companies with expertise in land ice, snow, and permafrost. The team excels in in-situ, drone, and remote sensing observations of the atmosphere, cryosphere, and hydrology, and in advanced process modelling—to Earth System Models (ESMs)—and applies state-of-the-art AI tools for impactful services to the end users. Applications include improving winter trafficability in Finland, optimizing hydropower generation in the Nordics and Switzerland, mapping glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) hazards, and predicting drought impacts in cold and temperate regions. Through stakeholder collaboration, the project also develops tailored services that integrate machine learning with physics-based numerical models to predict snow and ice-related processes. Furthermore, by creating targeted adaptation and mitigation strategies, CryoSCOPE strengthens climate resilience in some of the world’s most vulnerable landscapes.


More information is available on the CryoSCOPE project website.