New mobile app helps Inuit people hunt and navigate through ice melting from climate change

Venturing through the ice can be a dangerous task as the Earth warms.

December 10, 2019, 12:19 PM

A new mobile app could help members of the Inuit indigenous community to navigate the effects of climate change.

Named after the Inuktitut word for sea ice, SIKU provides tools and services for ice safety, language preservation and weather, according to its website. It also allows users to share ice and weather hazard reports and hunting stories, and provides alerts for land, marine and ice weather in the area.

"The weather's changing, the ice conditions are changing, and when we're driving a snow mobile or walking we have to think before we get on that ice," Inuit hunter Puasi Ippak said in a promotional video for the app.

PHOTO: Hunters near Sanikiluaq involved in community-driven research programs
Hunters near Sanikiluaq involved in community-driven research programs
SIKU
PHOTO: Hunters involved on Community Driven Research with AES take a water sample through the sea ice near Kuujjuaraapik.
Hunters involved on Community Driven Research with AES take a water sample through the sea ice near Kuujjuaraapik.
SIKU

SIKU, developed in conjunction with the Inuit Arctic Eider Society, combines ancient knowledge with modern technology, according to UNESCO.

"SIKU is particularly unique as a social media network in that users retain the rights to their intellectual property and detailed control over privacy and sharing," Joel Heath, executive director of the Inuit Arctic Eider Society, told ABC News. "This is particularly important in an Indigenous knowledge context for facilitating self-determination - even the SIKU platform can't use any of the contributed content without explicit permission from users."

The project was born after Inuit elders expressed a desire to document and share oral history with young people, Heath said Wednesday during the app's launch at the ArcticNet conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia, according to The Canadian Press.

"Oral history has been a big part of Inuit tradition," another Inuit hunter said in the video. "Nothing was written, so everybody just had a good memory."

PHOTO: Elder Jimmy Iqaluit and Hunter Johnny Kurluarok review posts on the SIKU online platform as a part of developing the platform.
Elder Jimmy Iqaluit and Hunter Johnny Kurluarok review posts on the SIKU online platform as a part of developing the platform.
SIKU

The community used to get its information from five different websites before the creation of the app.

SIKU addresses unique needs for the Inuit that other modern forums for community gathering like Facebook and Twitter don't, Lucassie Arragutainaq, manager of the Sanikiluaq Hunters and Trappers Association, told The Canadian Press. Its main types of posts are social, wildlife, sea ice and tools.

The SIKU project was awarded $750,000 in funding after it won the 2017 Google.org Impact Challenge in Canada.

PHOTO: Puasi Ippak tests out the SIKU mobile app near Sanikiluaq.
Puasi Ippak tests out the SIKU mobile app near Sanikiluaq.
SIKU

Inuit is a term used to characterize native peoples inhabiting arctic regions of Canada, Alaska and Greenland.

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