Canadian Geographic

POLAR BLOG

HOW QUEBEC RESEARCHER­S ARE CURBING DAMAGE FROM THAWING PERMAFROST

- BY JOHN BENNETT

Arctic airfields

PERMAFROST, THE FROZEN ground that underlies Canada’s Arctic, is rocksolid — as long as it stays frozen. But with a warming climate, that icy layer is changing, which can spell trouble for infrastruc­ture built on permafrost, including airport runways. Canada’s remote Arctic communitie­s depend on aircraft for essential services, from resupply of fresh food to emergency transport to hospitals. Michel Allard, a geographer at Laval University, studies the effects of changing permafrost on runways in Nunavik (Arctic Quebec) and Nunavut, and works with civil engineers to adapt them to climate change. The uppermost layer of permafrost, known as the active layer, thaws in summer. When this happens under a runway, its surface settles or cracks, requiring expensive repairs. Increasing­ly warm seasonal temperatur­es are causing the active layer to deepen, bringing more headaches for airport managers. The first step in protecting a runway from permafrost melt is to understand local conditions. Allard and his team take core samples to measure the amount of ice in the ground and its sensitivit­y to temperatur­e change — fine-textured soils, for instance, tend to collapse when they thaw. The researcher­s gauge the depth of the summer thaw and map how water drains and flows around the runway in summer. Then they devise a plan to protect the runway from thawing. “The goal is to keep the permafrost cold,” says Allard. “We use a mixture of methods precisely fitted to local conditions.” These include, he explains, installing ventilatio­n conduits and heat drains (membranes with hundreds of tiny air conduits inside), which allow air to circulate, keeping the temperatur­e down like open windows do in a house on a hot day. Drainage is modified so water is diverted away, because it transports heat and erodes soil and permafrost, and runway embankment­s are given a gentle slope so the wind can blow away snow that would otherwise accumulate and act as an insulator, trapping heat in the ground. So far, Allard and his team have made modificati­ons at six Nunavik airports and are now working on the runway at the internatio­nal airport in Iqaluit — built during the Second World War with no thought given to permafrost. “In Canada, our Arctic runways have always been well-maintained,” says Allard. “They’re reliable and they’re safe. We’re adapting them to the permafrost changes occurring now — and the ones we expect in the future — to make sure they stay that way.”

 ??  ?? The airport at Quaqtaq, Que., one of several northern runways that Laval University’s Michel Allard is modifying to mitigate the effects of climate change.
The airport at Quaqtaq, Que., one of several northern runways that Laval University’s Michel Allard is modifying to mitigate the effects of climate change.

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