COMNAP Antarctic Fellowships


The Council of Managers of National Antarctic Programs (COMNAP), the International Association of Antarctica Tour Operators (IAATO), the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) and the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) work together to support talented early-career researchers, scientists, engineers, environmental managers, and other professionals. The purpose is to strengthen international capacity and cooperation in fields such as climate, biodiversity, conservation, humanities and astrophysics research by providing annual funding opportunities.


The Submission for the COMNAP and IAATO Antarctic Fellowship 2024 is NOW closed

Thank you to all the applicants!

The review panel is currently evaluating the applications received.

Evaluation of COMNAP and IAATO Antarctic Fellowship applications received:

For the COMNAP applications, a review panel chaired by a representative of the COMNAP Executive Committee, and including expertise in the range of projects proposed, will evaluate all COMNAP proposals on the basis of the excellence of the proposed project. This evaluation will also take into consideration factors such as:

• its relevance to the list of proposed project themes;

• its achievability within the time frame allotted;

• the extent to which links have already been established with the proposed host institution;

• the extent to which it will strengthen the Antarctic science support capacity of the nations involved;

• its "fit" with COMNAP's goals and objectives.

For the IAATO applications, the IAATO Executive Committee plus one COMNAP EXCOM Member will evaluate all applications received before the deadline and will rank on the basis of excellence and fit to IAATO's overarching purpose, and must reflect the objectives of IAATO and add to our understanding of human presence in the Antarctic.

Completion of Fellowship

At the end of each Fellowship, each candidate must provide a report, covering the accomplishments and a budgetary report, to be published on the COMNAP and IAATO website. The COMNAP and IAATO Antarctic Fellowship scheme should be acknowledged in any resulting publications.


The COMNAP Early-Career Awards Recipients 2011-2023

The COMNAP Early-Career Awards (also know as COMNAP Antarctic Fellowship) was offered for the first time in 2011. It is designed to encourage the active involvement of early-career Antarctic persons and to strengthen international capacity and cooperation in the spirit of the Antarctic Treaty. It is intended to allow people from a COMNAP Member National Antarctic Program country to undertake short-term visits to major international laboratories, field facilities, and/or home institutions in or operated by other COMNAP Member National Antarctic Programs (for a list of members, please visit the “Our Members” page of the COMNAP website). The awardee’s project should contribute to the objectives of the home or host National Antarctic Program’s objectives.

The following were awarded COMNAP Early-Career Awards and their reports are available below.

2011-2012 Amelia Marks “Characterisation of bidirectional reflectance of Antarctic surface”, Royal Hollaway, United Kingdom, to ENEA/PNRA Italy

2012-2013 Ursula Rack “Reconstructing historic Antarctic climate data”, University of Canterbury, New Zealand, to Scott Polar Research Institute, United Kingdom

2012-2013 Jenson George (Awarded a joint SCAR/COMNAP Fellowship) “Influence of small scale mixing on the primary productivity and water mass formation in the Southern Ocean” NCAOR, India, to GEOMAR, Germany

2013-2014 Charlotte Havermans “The impact of environmental changes on a key component of the Southern Ocean”, Royal Belgium Institute of Natural Sciences, Belgium, to Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI), Germany

2013-2014 Luis Rodriguez Pertierra (Awarded a joint SCAR/COMNAP Fellowship) “Niche modelling as a tool for invasive risk assessment of vascular plants in terrestrial Antarctica”, Autonomous University of Madrid,​ Spain to Australian Antarctic Division, Australia

2014-2015 Sandra Potter “Quantifying factors limiting implementation of Annex III of the Protocol on Environmental Protection to the Antarctic Treaty”, University of Tasmania, Australia, to Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (AARI) / Russian Antarctic Expedition (RAE), Russia

2014-2015 Keith Soal “Characterisation of Ice-Structure and Fluid-Structure Interactions on Polar Vessels using Operational Modal Analysis”, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, to Germany and Finland

2015-2016 Alejandro Velasco Castrillon “100 years on: a re-evaluation of the first discovery of limno-terrestrial microfauna of the McMurdo Sound region”, University of Adelaide/South Australia Museum, Australia to McMurdo Sound, Antarctica

2015-2016 Inka Koch (Awarded a joint SCAR/COMNAP Fellowship), “Detecting marine ice internal layers and thickness in an Antarctic ice shelf with airborne ice penetrating radar”, University of Otago, New Zealand, to University of Texas, USA

2016-2017 Ronja Reese “Importance of Ice Buttressing in Antarctica”, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Germany, to the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), United Kingdom

2016-2017 Blanca Figuerola “Vulnerability of Antarctic bryozoan communities to environmental change”, University of Barcelona, Spain, to the Australian Antarctic Division, Australia

2016-2017 Christopher Horvat (Awarded a joint SCAR/COMNAP Fellowship) “Modelling the Antarctic Sea Ice Floe Size Distribution”, Harvard University, USA, to the National Institute of Water and Atmosphere, New Zealand​

2017-2018 Maria Gabriela Roldan “Inviting Antarctica into your home: an evaluation of public engagement with Antarctic science, science support, policy and technology”, Gateway Antarctica, New Zealand, to the Institute Antartico Chileno (INACH), Chile

2018-2019 Mikolaj Dziurzynski  “Omics-based modelling of metabolic processes of Antarctic bacterium, Pseudoalteromonas haloplanktis TACI25, in response to selected heavy metals”, University of Warsaw, Poland, to the University of Florence, Italy

2019-2020 Miguel González Pleiter (Awarded a joint IAATO/COMNAP Fellowship) “Understanding the consequences of microplastics introduction in the Antarctic environment: the Plastisphere Resistome”, University of Alcala, Spain, to the University of the Republic, Uruguay

2019-2020 Cinthya Elizabeth Bello Chirinos “Surface velocity and facies classification of Znosko glacier, King George Island, Antarctica, using SAR satellite data time series”, National Agrarian University of Molina, Peru, to the Institute of Oceanography Federal University of Rio Grande, Brazil

2020-2021 Paola Barros Delben “Health and Safety Risk Management in Isolation, Confinement, and Extreme Contexts”, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil, to the Instituto Universitário de Ciências Psicológicas, Sociais e da Vida, Lisboa, Portugal

2020-2021 Renan Lima “Coping with a fast-changing environment: an isotopic insight on the foraging ecology of pack-ice seals from the Antarctic Peninsula”, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande, Rio Grande, Brazil, to the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, United States of America

2021-2022 Aanchal Jain “Policy analysis to curb plastic pollution in Antarctic environment”, Universidad Mayor, Chile to the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Cambridge, United Kingdom

2021-2022 Antonio Polo Sánchez (Awarded a joint IAATO/COMNAP Fellowship) “Constraining the eruptive mechanisms of Three Sisters, Orca and Deception Island volcanoes (Bransfield Strait, Antarctica) through Noble Gases isotopic ratios. Implications for Geochemical Monitoring (BRANSVOLC)”, Universidad de Salamanca, Spain, to the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV), Palermo, Italy

2022-2023 Rafael Gonzales-Serrano “Viral metagenomics of extant and ancient viruses from Antarctic soils”, Centro de Biología Molecular Severo Ochoa (CBMSO), Madrid, Spain, to the University of Waikato, New Zealand.

In 2016, at the SCAR Open Science Conference, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, SCAR & COMNAP convened a Mini-Symposium on the fellowship programmes.
You can find the presentation by the SCAR Vice Chair CBET Professor Karen Lochte “What have we learned from the Fellowship Programme” here.

Other Opportunities

University of Canterbury Summer Scholarship Scheme

Each Austral summer, the University of Canterbury which hosts the COMNAP Secretariat in Christchurch, New Zealand, offers senior students an opportunity to work on a summer project. COMNAP has participated in two such projects and reports from each one are below.

2010/11 Max Gallagher “Impacts of Tsunami on National Antarctic Program Operations and Personnel in Coastal Antarctica”

2013/14 Hanne Nielsen “From Shelter to Showpiece: The Evolution of Antarctic Station design