The Phnom Penh Post

Warming Arctic is ‘new normal’

- Kerry Sheridan

ARAPIDLY warming Arctic, where temperatur­es are rising twice as fast as the rest of the planet, is the “new normal”, and the melting ice is triggering environmen­tal changes that will affect the whole world, warned a global scientific report on Tuesday.

The Arctic is going through “an unpreceden­ted transition in human history”, that will accelerate sea level rise and boost the frequency of extreme weather events, said the Arctic Report Card, released annually by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. The region around the north pole “shows no sign of returning to the reliably frozen region it was decades ago”, it said.

Last year, winter sea ice fell to the smallest extent on record, and air temperatur­es reached the second warmest in modern times, said the peer-reviewed report compiled by 85 scientists from 12 nations.

Fewer heat records were shattered last year, compared to 2016. But in context, the trend was clear.

“The magnitude and pace of the 21st century sea ice and surface ocean warming decline is unpreceden­ted in at least the last 1,500 years and likely much longer,” said the report.

“There are many strong signals that continue to indicate the Arctic environmen­tal system has reached a ‘new normal’.”

‘Refrigerat­or of planet’

The consequenc­es of this continued warming are dire, according to co-author Jeremy Mathis, director of NOAA’s Arctic Research Program. “The changes that are happening in the Arctic will not stay in the Arctic,” he told the annual meeting of the American Geophysica­l Union in San Francisco, where the report was released.

“These changes will impact all of our lives. They will mean living with more extreme weather events, paying higher food prices and dealing with the impacts of climate refugees.”

The warming is already harming valuable fisheries in the eastern Bering Sea, compromisi­ng roads, homes and infrastruc­ture due to permafrost thaw and risking increasing wildfires at high altitudes, said the report. Amundsen,

“The Arctic has traditiona­lly been the refrigerat­or of the planet,” explained Mathis. “But the door to that refrigerat­or has been left open and the cold is spilling out, cascading throughout the northern hemisphere.”

Extreme weather

Scientists say the two most pressing problems are the melting of the Greenland ice sheet and the warming of Arctic air and water.

“Greenland ice sheet melting has the potential to trigger catastroph­ic sea level rise, while the overall warming that is occurring in the Arctic can disrupt the jet stream, which drives our weather patterns and contribute­s to extreme weather events,” said Mathis.

Unusual cold snaps, drought in the western US, and storms along the Gulf Coast could all be influenced by Arctic sea ice melting, he said.

“We are seeing from model results and now from some limited observatio­ns that there are some connection­s between the warming and the loss of sea ice in the Arctic and the propagatio­n of extreme weather events that we are having across North America,’ he told the conference.

While much more research is needed to fully understand how the Arctic is influencin­g weather globally, Mathis said “we are fairly confident now that something is going on in the Arctic”.

“The warming that is occurring and the loss of sea ice that is occurring are creating conditions where more extreme weather events are beginning to show up in North America because of that.”

The Arctic Report Card is now in its 12th year, and is the first to be issued since the inaugurati­on of President Donald Trump, who has vowed to back out of the 2015 Paris climate agreement and has described global warming as a Chinese hoax.

NOAA’s acting administra­tor Tim Gallaudet was asked at a press conference if the American public should have confidence in the US government’s actions to fight climate change.

“The public – citing the State of the Arctic Report Card as an example – should have high confidence in us, NOAA and the administra­tion, because we are continuing to report on changes around the planet and in the Arctic to better inform the public and the government,” he answered.

 ??  ?? Ice chunks are seen in the Northwest Passage near the CCGS ice-breaker navigating in the Canadian High Arctic, in 2015. a Canadian research
Ice chunks are seen in the Northwest Passage near the CCGS ice-breaker navigating in the Canadian High Arctic, in 2015. a Canadian research

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