Nobel Week Dialogue

Water Matters

9 December 2018, Stockholm

Water is essential to the survival of humanity. Every drop is precious. The 2018 Nobel Week Dialogue turned its attention to a topic that is important to us all. How does humanity impact the ocean? Where does water get wasted? Can we change patterns of water use? As a resource, for our health, for the environment and in culture: water matters.

Watch the full event

The Nobel Week Dialogue is a free of charge, full-day event and part of the official Nobel Week programme. The event aims to stimulate discussion at the highest level on a topical science-related theme by bringing together Nobel Laureates, the world’s leading scientists and experts, key opinion leaders, policy makers and the general public, online as well as on site. By bridging science and society, it’s an opportunity to stimulate thinking, excite imagination and inspire greatness.

Event insights

Panellist interview

“We know as a matter of history that in a world one degree warmer than today the average sea level was six to nine metres higher. That would mean that central London is underwater.”

Steven Chu

Steven Chu.

© Nobel Media. Photo: Pi Frisk

Panellist interview

Peter Agre was awarded the 2003 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for discovering aquaporins, channels that allow water to travel between our body’s cells.

Peter Agre

Photo courtesy of Peter Agre

In-depth article

The human body contains about 60% water – without it humans wouldn’t survive. About 70% of the Earth’s surface is water-covered – the creatures on Earth wouldn’t survive without it.

 

Read about how some Nobel Laureates have been inspired to investigate this liquid further.

Crystal Jelly (Aequorea Victoria ), Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey, California, USA

Osamu Shimomura's jellyfish

Nobel Week Dialogue 2018

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