The winners of the 2013 Nobel Prizes are being announced this week in Stockholm and Oslo. The Local brings you all the latest news, reactions, and details surrounding the winners and why they won.
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11th: Peace Prize
"Disarmament figures prominently in Alfred Nobel's will. The Norwegian Nobel Committee has through numerous prizes underlined the need to do away with nuclear weapons. By means of the present award to the OPCW, the Committee is seeking to contribute to the elimination of chemical weapons," the committee announce. Meanwhile, Richard is working hard on putting it all together here for easy reading.
Richard Orange, 11.15am
Jagland now defending the 2009 award of the prize to Barack Obama, arguing that the US President had restarted the world's disarmament programme, which had been cancelled by the previous administration.
OPCW has NOT been given the #NobelPeacePrize because of Syria but because of its long standing work.
— Nobelprize_org (@Nobelprize_org) October 11, 2013
Richard Orange 11.12am
Thorbjorn Jagland refuses to comment on whether Malala Yousafzai was ever considered for the prize.
"The Committee never comments on those who didn’t get the prize," says when questioned about Malala for #nobelpeaceprize
He says that OPCW has not been give the prize because of its ongoing work in Syria, but because of its past achievements.
Sweden's Carl Bildt has thrown his support behind the award:
Nobel Peace Prize to OPCW strong support for banning forever all chemical weapons. All nations must sign, ratify and implement convention.
— Carl Bildt (@carlbildt) October 11, 2013
Richard Orange 11.08am
It will be the 25th time the prize has been awarded to an organisation. The UN, its agencies, and staff have won ten times.
Oliver Gee, 11:01am
PEACE WINNER ANNOUNCED: The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons for its extensive efforts to eliminate chemical weapons.
Richard Orange, 10.59am
One last reminder before the prize is announced in a few minutes that criticism of the prize is not new.
Adolf Hitler was nominated once in 1939. Incredulous though it may seem today, the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1939, by a member of the Swedish parliament, an E.G.C. Brandt.
Richard Orange, 10.50am
Ten minutes to go. Journalists waiting in the hall were just briefed on what's going to happen. Jagland to appear at 11am sharp.
If Malala did win, she'd be the youngest person to win the award by far, beating, replacing Yemeni journalist Tawakkol Karman, who was 32 when awarded the prize in 2011.
As for OPWC, Sidsel Wold from NRK is already starting the criticism of the award.
A good thought to give #NobelPeacePrize to #OPWC. But most syrians get killed by handweapons & conventional weapons. Solution is political.
— Sidsel Wold (@SidselWold) October 11, 2013
Oliver Gee, 10:46am
Here's an interesting peace fact:
Adolf Hitler was nominated once in 1939. Incredulous though it may seem today, the Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1939, by a member of the Swedish parliament, an E.G.C. Brandt. Apparently though, Brandt never intended the nomination to be taken seriously. Brandt was to all intents and purposes a dedicated antifascist, and had intended this nomination more as a satiric criticism of the current political debate in Sweden.
Oliver Gee, 10:30am
Peace has come to Oslo… but also to Stockholm. The Nobel chaos has left the Swedish capital (if only for one day), and it's a relief to be watching the prizes from the comfort of my own desk. A bit of office discussion going on here about today's potential winner.
It looks like AFP have been hearing from the same source as Norway's NRK, who claimed to have the scoop on OPCW earlier this morning. Reuters Correspondent Gwladys Fouchė points out that NRK got it right last year when they tipped the European Union.
Norwegian public broadcaster says the OPCW will win the #Nobelpeaceprize. They were right also last year, ahead of the announcement
— Gwladys Fouche (@gfouche) October 11, 2013
Richard Orange, 10.00am
Hello everyone and welcome to The Local Norway. We're now taking over coverage for the biggest and best of the Nobel Prizes, the Nobel Peace Prize, which will be announced in exactly one hour at Oslo's Nobel Peace Centre.
Will it go to Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani schoolgirl activist, whose candidacy has been massively hyped worldwide? Or will the Norwegian Nobel Committee surprise everyone once again?
According to AFP, following a scoop from NRK earlier this morning, Malala's backers are going to be disappointed.
#BREAKING: Nobel Peace Prize to go to Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons: TV report
— Agence France-Presse (@AFP) October 11, 2013
Thursday, October 10th: Literature Prize
David Landes, 2.40pm
My colleagues are back and writing up their quotes to add to our story on Alice Munro, The Local Norway for the awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo. Be sure to tune in to find out who will succeed the European Union (EU) as the next Nobel peace laureate. In the meantime, why not pick up a book from Alice Munro and curl up for a Nobel-winning read.
David Landes, 2.05pm
Just received word from Oliver that he's had a chat with Peter Englund from the Swedish Academy and is heading back to the office. Stay tuned. For those of you who can't wait, here's what Englund had to say to the official Nobel Media folks shortly after today's announcement:
David Landes, 1.45pm
"The Swedish Academy has not been able to get a hold of Alice Munro, left a phone message," was the message sent out shortly after she was announced as the prize winner. It's pretty early in the morning on the other side of the Atlantic. I wonder if they left a phone number for her to call back…
@thelocalsweden Englund explains the power of Munro's stories pic.twitter.com/jr6RraMgRh
— Solveig Rundquist (@RundquistS) October 10, 2013
David Landes, 1.34pm
While Oliver does his best to track down Peter Englund, here is a list of the past 15 winners of the Nobel literature prize:
2013: Alice Munro (Canada)
2012: Mo Yan (China)
2011: Tomas Transtroemer (Sweden)
2010: Mario Vargas Llosa (Peru)
2009: Herta Mueller (Germany)
2008: Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clezio (France)
2007: Doris Lessing (Britain)
2006: Orhan Pamuk (Turkey)
2005: Harold Pinter (Britain)
2004: Elfriede Jelinek (Austria)
2003: J.M. Coetzee (South Africa)
2002: Imre Kertesz (Hungary)
2001: V.S. Naipaul (Britain)
2000: Gao Xingjian (France)
1999: Gunter Grass (Germany)
Oliver Gee, 1:17pm
I am going to get Peter Englund now for an interview. Read all about the winner and the announcement
Oliver Gee, 11.08am Ah, I remember last year's Chem prize fondly. I was there at the announcement. And who could forget when G-protein–coupled receptors were finally recognized as Nobel worthy? Read morehere.
I think the Nobel Prize for Chemistry should go to the final season of Breaking Bad. #BreakingBad #NobelPrize
— Oliver Gee (@TheUppsalaKoala) October 9, 2013
Royal academy of sciences #nobel #chemistry pic.twitter.com/ETDy5mXedi
— Ann Törnkvist (@Ann_TheLocal) October 9, 2013
David Landes, 11.01am
Just received word that Ann has arrived at the Royal Academy buildings at Stockholm University for today's chemistry prize announcement. In other news, there have been some developments about why yesterday's physics prize announcement was delayed. Hint: it doesn't appear to have been a paper jam. Stay tuned.
Oliver Gee, 10.18am
Yes, keep an eye on Ann today, she will be on the scene and tweeting it all to the world as it happens. Follow her on Twitter here.
Ann Törnkvist, 9.57am
In a bit less than two hours, we'll know who has been awarded the 2013 Nobel Prize for Chemistry. The Reuters news wire has a short list of candidates that could be in the running: Paul Alivisatos, Chad Mirkin and Nadrian C. Seeman For contributions to DNA nanotechnology Bruce Ames For the invention of the Ames test of mutagenicity M.G. Finn and Valery Fokin and Barry Sharpless For the development of modular click chemistry
Tuesday, October 8th: Physics Prize
David Landes, 2.20pm
Well, the magnificent room here at the Royal Academy has calmed down considerably following a prolonged flurry of activity during which we learned that the 2013 Nobel Prize in physics was shared by Professors François Englert and Peter Higgs. You can read more about the winners and the research by clicking here.. After the press conference, I had a chance to speak with Björn Janson, a physics professor at Chalmers in Gothenburg (who also happens to sit on the Academy). He could hardly contain his enthusiasm about this year's winners. He called the work "the most beautiful experiment ever done", adding that both the theory as well as the experiment itself are incredibly impressive. I'm going to wrap things up for today, but be sure to check back again tomorrow for the chemistry price announcement. The Local's Ann Törnkvist will be on hand to bring you the latest.
Oliver Gee, 1.41pm
Sorry for the brief delay, was updating this. But here is what's just gone down. David asked the Nobel Laureate Professor Englert himself what he planned to say to Higgs when he saw him next. Englert responded: "I'm going to congratulate him of course, because I think he did very important and excellent work," Englert told us, adding that he had never met Professor Higgs until the July 4th conference at Cern last year. Read more about it here.
Englert tells @davelandes he is gonna congratulate Hibbs as soon as he sees/speaks with him. Only met last year. #nobel
— TheLocal/Ann (@TheLocalSweden) October 8, 2013
Oliver Gee, 1.10pm
Dave Landes just posed a question to Mr Englert himself about his relationship with Higgs. More info shortly.
Understatement of the year "This is a little bit difficult" -Prof Olga Botner explaining the #Higgs particle discovery #Nobel #NobelPrize
— David Landes (@DaveLandes) October 8, 2013
Oliver Gee, 1.01pm
More on the winning discovery here.
Oliver Gee, 1.01pm
A bit of background on the winners: François Englert was born in 1932 in Belgium, and has a Ph.D from the Université Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, in Belgium. He is now Professor Emeritus at the same university. Peter W. Higgs is a UK citizen, born in 1929 in Newcastle upon Tyne. He studied at King's College, University of London, and is the professor emeritus at University of Edinburgh.
Oliver Gee, 12.47pm
PHYSICS WINNERS ANNOUNCED: The award went to Peter Higgs and Francois Englert for "the theoretical discovery of a mechanism that contributes to our understanding of the origin of mass of subatomic particles, and which recently was confirmed through the discovery of the predicted fundamental particle, by the ATLAS and CMS experiments at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider."
"We will start this press conference in a couple of minutes" Finally #nobel #nobelprize
— David Landes (@DaveLandes) October 8, 2013
Oliver Gee, 12.41pm
Should just be a few minutes until the announcement now. A lot of speculation in this office, at least, about why they would have such a long delay.
David Landes, 12.29pm
So, we're now 15 minutes from the latest announced time for the revealing of the winner of the Nobel in physics. And there is a definite uptick in activity here in the room where the press conference will take place. Most signs point to the announcement happening at 12.45pm. The projector has been adjusted, the water bottles have been opened, etc. The only thing we still don't know is who the winner(s) will be and why it took so long for them to make the announcement.
David Landes, 12.11pm
An interesting theory about the delay has emerged from one of our Twitter followers, Sebastian Buhai:
@Nobelprize_org To speculate further, the conundrum might really be whether CERN gets 1/2 w Englert-Higgs sharing the other 1/2, OR 1/3 each
— Sebastian Buhai (@sbuhai) October 8, 2013
Can't say I'm in a position to verify the theory, but worth considering, I'd say.
David Landes, 12.02pm
Just received word there is an additional 15 minute delay. 12.45 at the earliest is when we will get to know the winner of the Nobel in physics. Maybe someone got locked in the toilet? Pretty soon the story of the delay will be bigger than the story of the winner…depending on what we learn about why things kept getting delayed. Strange times here at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. The journalist to my right is dealing with the situation appropriately. He's digging into a Mars bar.
Oliver Gee, 11.51am
While we’re waiting, why not check out a picture gallery of when we asked Stockholmers about their favourite prize. Clue: no one said Physics.
David Landes, 11.50am
A NEW delay has just been announced. Another 15 minutes. The press conference not due to start until 12.30 "at the earliest". This is indeed unusual. I wonder what the explanation will be when they finally emerge. Oliver Gee, 11.49am While we’re waiting, why not check out a picture gallery of when we asked Stockholmers about their favourite prize. Clue: no one said Physics.
David Landes, 11.48am
Well, we were supposed to have known the winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in physics by now, but as we've pointed out, the announcement has been pushed back for unknown reasons. The spokeswoman who made the announcement quickly disappeared, and no one seems to have any concrete facts about the reason for the delay. According to the Nobel Foundation's official twitter account, "the academy is still in session". So perhaps picking the winner this year isn't as clear cut as many seemed to think. In the meantime, people around me are calling their editors and producers in a bid to reschedule live feeds, etc. But not else to do but wait, I guess.
Oliver Gee, 11.42am
No one seems to know why the announcement has been delayed by half an hour… very unusual.
This just in…the press conference will be delayed until at least 12.15 #Nobel #NobelPrize
— David Landes (@DaveLandes) October 8, 2013
David Landes, 11.21am
Greetings from inside the walls of the Royal Swedish Academy. I've secured a seat at the table for the press conference, and I can sense the energy building (physics pun not intended). They tell us the physics prize will be announced at 11.45am "at the earliest" by Staffan Normark, Permanent Secretary of the Academy, or RSAS, for short.
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Or Kungliga Vetenskapsakademin, as it's known in Swedish #NobelPrize pic.twitter.com/a23qtukvBL
— David Landes (@DaveLandes) October 8, 2013
Oliver Gee, 10.59am
Just 47 minutes until the announcement. You want some more fun facts? OK, here come a few: – Alfred Nobel, who left most of his fortune to start the Nobel Prizes, was once nicknamed "The Merchant of Death" for inventing dynamite. – The average age of all Nobel Laureates in all prize categories between 1901 and 2011 is 59 years. Physics laureates, however, are the youngest bunch on average at 55. They don't wast any time. The youngest physics laureate was 25 years old Lawrence Bragg who won with his father in X-ray spectra research.
Only 2 women have been awarded a #NobelPrize in Physics so far, Marie Curie and Maria Goeppert-Mayer #womeninscience
— Nobelprize_org (@Nobelprize_org) October 8, 2013
Oliver Gee, 10.35am
Is it too early for a Fun Fact? Of course it's not. It's never too early. There's only one person in history who has ever been awarded the Physics Prize twice. His name was John Bardeen (1908 – 1991) and he worked in the field of superconductivity.
Oliver Gee, 10.25am
Morning! Time for day two of our Nobel coverage, and editor Dave Landes is on his way to the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. While we're waiting for him to get there, why not read more about the man who's tipped to win today. Why not follow Dave on Twitter while you're at it?
Monday, October 7th: Physiology or Medicine Prize
Oliver Gee, 2.49pm
I'm shutting down this blog for today, but read my whole interview with Göran Hansson here. He used a nice metaphor about Stockholm transport to explain the winning discovery, explained the practicality of the research for the man on the street, and told us why so few women have won the award. Thanks for reading, and tune in again tomorrow for the Nobel Prize in Physics, where editor David Landes will be on the scene and at the helm. Cheers.
Oliver Gee, 12.22pm
Just spoke to Göran Hansson, Secretary General of the Nobel Committee at Karolinska Institutet. He explained the win in simple English, explaining that the prize was awarded for the expansion of scientific knowledge rather than the practical use of the discovery. More soon, I'm heading back to the office.
Ann Törnkvist, 11:52am
"It was in one way expected, as they recently got the world's second most prestigious prize, the Lasker Prize," Swedish science journalist Karin Bojs told Sveriges Television (SVT) upon news of the announcement.
Oliver Gee, 11.51am
Announcement over, time to go and try and snag an interview or two and to try and get to the bottom of all this.
Oliver Gee, 11.49am
Straight from the horses mouth: "Each cell is a factory that produces and exports molecules. For instance, insulin is manufactured and released into the blood and chemical signals called neurotransmitters are sent from one nerve cell to another. These molecules are transported around the cell in small packages called vesicles. The three Nobel Laureates have discovered the molecular principles that govern how this cargo is delivered to the right place at the right time in the cell." Pretty straight forward, really.
Oliver Gee, 11.45am
What did the prize winners say when they were informed of their win? Göran Hansson responds: "I've spoken to Rothman and Schekman and they were both delighted… they're both looking forward to coming to Stockholm."
Göran Hansson has a sense of humour: "No questions?? It's almost like lecturing to Swedish undergraduate students!"
— Oliver Gee (@TheUppsalaKoala) October 7, 2013
Oliver Gee, 11.43am
Background on the winners: James E. Rothman, born in 1950 in Massachusetts, in the US, studied at Harvard Medical School and was a postdoctoral fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Started his cell research at Stanford. Randy W. Schekman, born in 1948 in Minnesota, in the US, studied at Stanford and the University of California. Currently the professor in Molecular and Cell Biology at University of California at Berkeley. Thomas C. Sudhof: Born in 1955 in Göttingen, Germany, her studied at Georg-August-Universität in Germany and later at the University of Texas. Later he became an investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and more recently has been appointed at Stanford University.
Oliver Gee, 11.40am
A few perplexed faces here, though one man started clapping. Allow us to break this all down as the jury motivates their choice.
Oliver Gee, 11.35am MEDICINE WINNERS ANNOUNCED: Göran Hansson, Secretary General of the Nobel Committee at Karolinska Institutet announced the winners: James Rothman, Randy Schekman, and Thomas Sudhof for their discoveries of machinery regulating vesicle traffic, a major transport system in our cells. Oliver Gee, 11.25am Here, why not watch what I am watching:
Oliver Gee, 11.23am
I am here at the Karolinska Institute. In a crowd of journalists and spectators. Cameras and microphones. We're all just waiting now… a hush has passed over the crowd as we wait for the jury to come and share the news.
It's all about to go down. Just waiting on the jury… pic.twitter.com/jKyozpPZEU
— Oliver Gee (@TheUppsalaKoala) October 7, 2013
Ann Törnkvist, 10:47am
Another tidbit. It's not enough to be an eminent researcher, you have to be what head of the jury Göran K. Hansson calls a "discoverer" – and not only that… the discovery has to be paradigm-shifting. In other words, not something that simply nudges science along, but something that either unlocks new potential or has the scientific community reexamining that area in a completely new light.
Ann Törnkvist, 10:35am
Some facts about the prize: The average age of medicine laureates is 57, but Frederick G. Banting was 32 when he won in 1923 for discovering insulin. Peyton Rous, meanwhile, was the oldest laureate so far. At age 87, he was was recognized in 1966 for his discovery of tumour-inducing viruses.
Not sure who will win the Medicine Prize today, but chances are it won't be a woman. Only ten women have ever won it (out of 201 winners).
— Oliver Gee (@TheUppsalaKoala) October 7, 2013
Ann Törnkvist, 10:12am
Last year's medicine prize went to John B. Gurdon and Shinya Yamanaka for research into stem cells for the discovery that mature cells can be reprogrammed to become pluripoint.
Oliver Gee, 10.01am
Hello readers and welcome to The Local's Live Blog of the Nobel Prize announcements for 2013. Here, we will report on all the announcements live from the scene. Today, we're kicking off with "Physiology or Medicine" – a prize which has been given by the Nobel Assembly at Karolinska Institutet to 201 people since 1901. But what (or who) is Nobel, and what are the prizes all about? Read more about Swedish scientist Alfred Nobel himself, his invention of gunpowder, and how his last will and testament led to the modern Nobel Prizes.
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