The Star Malaysia

Siberian region fights to preserve permafrost as planet warms

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YAKUTSK: Eduard Romanov points to a spot on a block of flats where a major supporting beam has sagged and begun to crack, destabilis­ing the nine storeys of apartments above.

In Russia’s Siberian city of Yakutsk, one of the coldest on Earth, climate change is causing dangerous melting of the frozen ground, or permafrost, on which the buildings stand.

“Since the year before last, the building has started to list and has tilted about 40cm,” says Romanov, a constructi­on worker and environmen­tal activist.

“There is a danger that it will tilt even more,” he says, as labourers perform emergency welding on the structure, the temperatur­e around 35°

- C.

Average temperatur­es in Yakutsk

2.5° have risen by C over the past decade, say scientists at the Melnikov Permafrost Institute located here, the world’s only such research centre.

Most Soviet-era apartment blocks

in Yakutsk are made of concrete panels and stand on stilts to ventilate the building’s underside and prevent it heating the permafrost, a layer of soil cemented together with

water that is only stable as long as it stays frozen.

Rising summer temperatur­es can destroy the solid permafrost.

As the ice melts, the clay or sand simply sinks together with whatever is on top of it – a road, a building, a lake or a layer of fertile “black earth” for agricultur­e.

Permafrost covers almost the whole of Yakutia – a northeast Siberian region bordering the Arctic Ocean, an area five times the size of France.

In total, around 65% of Russian territory is covered by permafrost.

With a population of about 300,000, Yakutsk is the world’s largest city built on permafrost, and it could be especially in danger from the melting that Romanov and many residents fear.

Older buildings were not constructe­d with a warming climate in mind.

In the 1960s, the norm was to drive stilts 6m deep into the solid permafrost, which is no longer sufficient today as the surface warms, Romanov says.

Some buildings in Yakutsk have already had to be demolished while others are full of cracks.

“All of Yakutsk is in danger. The owners face losing their property, and nobody is ready for this,” Romanov says.

“These problems will multiply in the future, so we need to start addressing this today.”

As an Arctic country, Russia is warming about two-and-a-half times faster than the rest of the world.

In Yakutsk, locals say that two decades ago, schools would be closed for weeks on end when temperatur­es dropped to -55°C, but such spells of extreme cold are now rare.

Russia’s environmen­t ministry said in a report this year that deteriorat­ion of permafrost poses many risks to people and nature.

It affects water, sewage and oil pipes as well as buried chemical, biological and radioactiv­e substances, the report said.

Melting permafrost enables any pollutants to spread faster and more widely, seeping through previously solid ground, the report said.

 ?? — AFP ?? On thin ice: People passing by a cracked panel apartment in Yakutsk. Many houses here stand on stilts to ensure ventilatio­n of the building’s underbelly, and prevent it from heating the permafrost.
— AFP On thin ice: People passing by a cracked panel apartment in Yakutsk. Many houses here stand on stilts to ensure ventilatio­n of the building’s underbelly, and prevent it from heating the permafrost.

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