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Help get your science into policy by becoming a Division Policy Officer!
  • 12 March 2026

Did you know you volunteer at the science-policy interface with EGU?! Several EGU divisions are currently seeking a Division Policy Officer, a voluntary position that aims to promote evidence-informed policymaking and support members of the Division in engaging with policymaking processes. Find out more and get involved today!



Job alert! Executive Assistant
  • 25 February 2026

The European Geosciences Union (EGU) is seeking to appoint an Executive Assistant to support the EGU Executive Director. Applications will be assessed from 12:00 CET on the 23 March.




Latest posts from EGU blogs

Geodesists on Tour: Circumnavigating Greenland by Helicopter

Greenland, the world’s largest island, has one of the most challenging environments for geodetic measurements. Maintaining GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite Systems) stations here isn’t just about precision – it’s about ensuring data continuity in an area that’s constantly moving. This is the behind-the-scenes story of a 15,000 km journey around Greenland: five weeks of helicopter-based fieldwork, two engineers, a helicopter pilot and, and more challenges than we can count – each one earning us a few extra grey hairs. The …


EGU26’s Code of Conduct: standards of behaviour for all our participants

Are you ready?! EGU26, Europe’s biggest meeting for Earth, planetary and space science research, is now just over a month away! But even sooner than that you only have two days left to grab your Early Bird rates for registration. If you have already booked your registration you will probably have noticed that by purchasing your registration to participate in EGU26 you will also have agreed to abide by EGU’s Code of Conduct, but what does that mean? EGU is …


Classroom on Ice: The Patagonian Icefield Research Program

An isolated fjord at the edge of the Southern Patagonia Icefield. A small cluster of tents pitched beside Bernal Glacier. Fourteen days without roads, cell reception, or routine – only creaking ice fronts, restless wind, the constant murmur of meltwater, unrelenting rain, and a team of fellow adventurers as companions. The Patagonia Icefield Research Program (PIRP) is an immersive classroom where students and early-career researchers learn directly from the landscape and the glacier itself. This is our adventure diary from …