The Young Earth Scientists’ (YES) Congress was held in Beijing in October 2009, bringing together the geologists, policy makers and politicians of the future. Joanne Venus describes the event and collects reactions from delegates.
Geoscientist 20.02 February 2010
The first ever International Congress for Young Earth-Scientists was held in Beijing from 25 to 28 October 2009 and was organised by the YES international network. This Congress was the culmination of over two years’ work and planning; but it was not the end of YES. The Congress was merely the launch-pad for the YES Network.
But why should you care, and is YES really relevant to all sectors and all stages of careers for Earth scientists? The YES project was conceived over two years ago by two members of the Italian Geological Society Young Section (David Govoni and Luca Miccuci). Its main aim has been to bring together early career geoscientists from around the world to discuss common themes, and to promote communication between geoscientists and policy makers. Similar types of organisations were already emerging in various countries, including the Young Geoscientists Group in the UK. Currently we have an International Committee of over 30 people and a mailing list of well over 500 from all over the world. There were 380 attendees at the Beijing Congress, of which over 180 were non-Chinese.
But why a special conference for young Earth scientists? I will try to answer this with another question. Have you ever sat - in a conference hall, meeting or in your office - and wondered where all the young geoscientists are? The YES network not only tries to further research and communication within the scientific community, but is reaching out into the wider community - to prove that we can communicate in jargon-free language with those of our age group from different disciplines, but who will need to work together in future to mitigate urgent world problems like climate change.
YES is the first ever network of early-career scientists that is truly international – and is made even more special by the fact that it was started by younger geoscientists, for younger geoscientists! We have formed at a time of rapid advances in technology and we aim to make the use of all of these. We have a full online presence and also stream our events live via Webinar (hosted by AGI).