Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue
Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue is a national association of volunteer rescue units and accident-prevention divisions in Iceland. The association’s network spans nearly 100 local rescue units, dozens of accident-prevention divisions and youth sections, with several thousand active on-call volunteers nationwide. Although ICE-SAR teams provide a public emergency service, they are charities funded primarily by donations and fund-raising, notably the nationwide New Year fireworks sale and the annual Neyðarkall campaign.
History
ICE-SAR traces its origins to 1918, when the first organized rescue team in Iceland was founded in the Westman Islands in response to frequent maritime accidents; women on shore were central organizers of the early effort.Organized SAR expanded rapidly after the 1950 Geysir air crash on the Vatnajökull glacier, when the crew survived but became stranded; a U.S. rescue aircraft itself became stuck, and an Icelandic civilian overland expedition ultimately effected the rescue.
The modern association, Slysavarnafélagið Landsbjörg, was formally established on 2 October 1999 by merging the Icelandic Lifesaving Association with Landsbjörg, the national federation of rescue teams.
Rescue units
ICE-SAR coordinates local rescue units across Iceland that respond 24/7 to emergencies on land and at sea. Active on-call volunteers number in the thousands; public sources commonly describe roughly 100 local teams and a total membership historically around 10,000. Units train year-round; new rescuers typically complete extensive multi-month coursework and frequent field exercises before full operational membership.International urban search and rescue (USAR)
ICE-SAR maintains an international USAR unit composed of experienced volunteers from local teams. The unit’s first foreign deployment was to the 1999 İzmit earthquake. In September 2009 the unit achieved INSARAG External Classification as a Medium USAR team.Following the 2010 Haiti earthquake, the Icelandic team arrived in Port-au-Prince within about 24 hours; early reports credited it among the first foreign USAR teams on scene and rescuing survivors from the Caribbean Market complex.
International missions (selection)
- 1999 İzmit earthquake
- 2003 Boumerdès earthquake
- 2004 Al Hoceima earthquake
- 2010 Haiti earthquake
- 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquake
Accident prevention
ICE-SAR also coordinates local accident-prevention initiatives and public safety campaigns. Fund-raising activities include the long-running New Year fireworks sale and the annual Neyðarkall keychain drive that support local teams’ equipment and training.Accident prevention branches
There are 70 AP Branches in ICE-SAR. Of which about 40 are very active. The work of the AP Branches is to promote accident prevention in the local community and support the local rescue team. The AP branches work on different assignments depending on the local people's needs. About 15 years ago, the main mission was to raise funds for the local rescue teams.Life skills
In Icelandic primary schools, the curriculum area lífsleikni includes safety and accident-prevention topics. ICE-SAR has supported this with teaching materials developed for grades 4–6 under the title Geimálfurinn frá Varslys, produced in collaboration with the educational portal Skólavefurinn; the package includes a reader, worksheets, slides and short videos for classroom use.Surveys about the use of child safety equipment in vehicles
Since 1996, ICE-SAR has helped run annual observational surveys outside preschools across the country, in cooperation with national traffic-safety bodies and teacher-training students. By 2006 the survey was in its 11th year and covered 68 preschools nationwide.National traffic surveys show a steep improvement in child-restraint use during the late 1990s and early 2000s: by 2002, the share of children riding with appropriate safety equipment was reported near 98% in observed samples.
Follow-up preschool surveys conducted with ICE-SAR and Samgöngustofa continue to track usage. In 2015, reports highlighted that only ~2% of children were completely unrestrained. More recent datasets show further gains, with some municipalities at or near 100% correct restraint use and <1% completely unrestrained.