Apply to host EGU-sponsored Geoscience Day public event(s) 2025
29 November 2024
The European Geosciences Union (EGU) is inviting applications for a grant of up to €10,000 to host the fifth EGU Geoscience Day. These flagship public events run on one day each year in a rotating European country. The aim is to raise awareness of the Earth, planetary and space sciences to school students, the wider public, policymakers and journalists. The grant is available for a team to bring to fruition one or several large public events in 2025 on the same day in a single European country.
The 2024 Geoscience Day was hosted in Ireland, spread across several events in Mayo, Dundalk, Cork and Dublin. Event co-ordinator and successful applicant for the 2024 Geoscience Day funding, Fergus McAuliffe, Education, Public Engagement & Communications Manager at iCRAG, said “I am thrilled to share [that Geoscience Day Ireland] was a huge success! The four events for Geoscience Day were delivered as planned, with highlights taking place in each of the four locations. You can see the range of activities in the photographs everything from a marine geoscience art exhibition to storytelling, and from a deep dive into fossils to a field trip to a local beach. Geoscience Day here in Ireland would also not have been possible without the sustained efforts of our army of volunteers and individuals within [our partner] organisations who were a pleasure to work with throughout.”
Applications are now open for the 2025 Geoscience Day grant. EGU particularly encourages applications from EU enlargement background (candidates for joining the EU) and EU-13 (those which joined in 2004 and later) countries. If several events are proposed, they should ideally be held in several different locations across the country but on the same day. There are no restrictions on the format of the Geoscience Day or the proposed activities.
Successful proposals should aim to include at least two of the following audiences: school children from under-represented demographics within geosciences; “inactive” public audiences who don’t typically seek out science events are encouraged; national science policymakers, journalists, or non-governmental organisations.
Applications should aim to include at least one of the following:
• Two-way dialogues between geoscientists and communities
• Co-created, where communities and stakeholders contribute to their design
• Audience-centred, built around considering the audience’s experience first and foremost
• Innovative, addressing barriers and issues in society through new and transdisciplinary methods (especially from outside of the geosciences)
Applications for the EGU Geoscience Day 2025 will be open until the end of 31 January 2025. All applications should be submitted in English, but the event(s) should be in the most suitable language for the target audience(s). The Geoscience Day event(s) must then be completed before the end of 2025. For more information, visit the EGU Geoscience Day page.
Please note that only active EGU members, who either have a regular, student, emeritus or complementary membership for 2025, or who are life or honorary members of the EGU, are eligible to lead applications. However, EGU encourages proposal teams to be diverse, including non-scientists, and team members (outside of the lead) do not have to be EGU members. Additionally, please bear in mind that members of the EGU Outreach Committee (presently or applying in the future) are not eligible to apply.
To apply for a grant, please use the application form in your EGU member user area. For more information contact the Outreach Committee Chair Solmaz Mohadjer at outreach@egu.eu.
More information
The European Geosciences Union (EGU) is Europe’s premier geosciences union, dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in the Earth, planetary, and space sciences for the benefit of humanity, worldwide. It is a non-profit interdisciplinary learned association of scientists founded in 2002 with headquarters in Munich, Germany. The EGU publishes a number of diverse scientific journals, which use an innovative open access format, and organises a number of topical meetings, and education and outreach activities. Its annual General Assembly is the largest and most prominent European geosciences event, attracting over 18,000 scientists from all over the world. The meeting’s sessions cover a wide range of topics, including volcanology, planetary exploration, the Earth’s internal structure and atmosphere, climate, energy, and resources.
Contact
Solmaz Mohadjer
Chair, EGU Outreach Committee
European Geosciences Union
Email outreach@egu.eu