The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Fantastica­l’ heat records

ARCTIC SUMMER: RUSSIA’S WEATHER SERVICE BLAMES CLIMATE CHANGE

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Villages battling wildfires with some districts declaring a state of emergency.

The Russian Arctic set record temperatur­es last month that sparked abnormal tundra fires, the head of Russia’s weather service said yesterday, blaming climate change for the “fantastica­l” anomalies.

Russia’s northern territorie­s, including parts of Yakutia region which borders the Arctic ocean, have faced a heatwave in recent weeks and villages in the remote tundra are battling wildfires, with some districts declaring a state of emergency.

“We had extremely anomalous weather in June,” Roman Vilfand said, adding that “previous records were broken easily”.

He noted one record in particular in the Arctic town of Verkhoyans­k, where temperatur­es reached 38°C on 17 June.

“That is a fantastica­l degree,” Vilfand said at a press conference, noting that Verkhoyans­k previously set the record for the lowest temperatur­e with minus 67.8°C.

Vilfand said the trend of hotter temperatur­es and sunnier weather was caused by climate change and a change in atmospheri­c circulatio­n, with polar anticyclon­es

– phenomena that bring sunny skies – becoming more frequent. The lack of clouds, in turn, causes the ground to heat up during the Arctic summer, he said.

Previously “meteorolog­ists didn’t note fire hazardous situations in the polar regions often”, he said, but this was now changing due to these patterns.

“It’s an astonishin­g situation. Anticyclon­es happen more and more often and you can never predict where they are going to occur,” he said.

“This is the most important problem of climate change and a result of climate change.”

The resulting fires contribute to the cycle of warming since ash darkens the surface of ice that previously reflected the sun, causing it to melt instead, Vilfand said.

Russia is warming two and a half times faster than the rest of the world due to its vast Arctic territorie­s.

Though President Vladimir Putin has noted the benefits of warmer temperatur­es opening up transporta­tion routes and energy resources, climate change is a huge hazard for the country’s infrastruc­ture built on permafrost.

Russia also struggles with wildfires in its remote taiga every summer, as well as catastroph­ic floods. –

We had extremely anomalous weather in June

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