The first half of this 5-year project had to deal with two major challenges: the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russian attack on Ukraine. Both of them severely impacted the ambitious fieldwork plans of the project. Because of the pandemic, no fieldwork in the remote communities of the Arctic was possible during year 1. Preliminary fieldwork started in February 2022, while more extended stays had to wait until summer of 2022. As of June 30, 2023, 1 research trip to Alaska, 1 to the Faroe Islands (Denmark), 2 to Churchill (Canada), 2 to Nunavut (Canada), 2 to Kirkenes (Norway), 2 to Kiruna (Sweden) and Narvik (Norway), as well as 3 research trips to Rovaniemi (Finland) have been conducted by core members of the project team. In addition, fieldwork in West Greenland has been conducted by an associate researcher of the project.
In the first 30 months, three InfraNorth project workshop have been conducted: one devoted to the geopolitics and global economics of Arctic transport, one to the history of Arctic Infrastructures, and one devoted to ethnographies of infrastructure. At this point, 12 peer-reviewed articles have been published by InfraNorth team members. Most of them are based on data that were already available at the beginning of the project. New data collected in 2022 and 2023 are being analyzed and prepared for publication right now – the first of them will appear in the second half of 2023 and many more in 2024 and beyond. Currently, contributions for three special issues of journals are being collected and reviewed. Two of them result from InfraNorth project workshops, while one is the outcome of a dedicated conference session. A lot of effort has been put into developing future scenarios for the communities of Churchill (Canada) and Kirkenes (Norway), as well as into preparations for local scenario workshops in these places, which will take place during the second half of 2023. More workshops might follow in 2024 and beyond.