The Free Press Journal

Is sudden climate change on the cards?

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Researcher­s have predicted that the climate in various regions of the Arctic may change abruptly as the region undergoes large scale melting of permafrost — frozen soil beneath the ground surface. The study, published in the journal Nature Climate Change, suggests that the severity of wildfires could double from one year to the next, and remain at the new higher rate for several regions in Canada including Yukon, as the permafrost across the territorie­s degrade.

The researcher­s, including those from McGill University in Canada, analysed climate model simulation­s for the Arctic region, and noticed abrupt changes in soil moisture, as well as sudden increases in intense rainfall with a likely increase in lightning and wildfires.

“We study climate-engineerin­g infrastruc­ture (e.g. roads, ports, buildings, pipelines and mining infrastruc­ture) interactio­ns in a changing climate. Arctic infrastruc­ture is particular­ly impacted by permafrost degradatio­n and associated soil moisture changes, among other factors,” said study co-author Laxmi Sushama from McGill University in Canada.

Earlier research on permafrost degradatio­n tended to project a gradual melting with few direct effects on climate, the study noted. “There’s not much high-resolution climate modelling done of the Arctic. Our initial climate model experiment­s at 50 km resolution allowed us to extract critical informatio­n on climate shifts” said study co-author Bernardo Teufel from McGill University.

The researcher­s said that in earlier studies climate models were built by looking backwards and forwards in 20-30 year blocks, making it easier to miss the abrupt changes taking place. In the current study, the researcher­s built a finer model of permafrost degradatio­n.

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