El Dorado News-Times

Wildfires rage in Arctic; sea ice is melting

-

GENEVA — The U.N. weather agency warned Friday that average temperatur­es in Siberia were 10 degrees Celsius (18 Fahrenheit) above average last month, a spate of exceptiona­l heat that has fanned devastatin­g fires in the Arctic Circle and contribute­d to a rapid depletion in ice sea off Russia’s Arctic coast.

“The Arctic is heating more than twice as fast as the global average, impacting local population­s and ecosystems and with global repercussi­ons,” World Meteorolog­ical

Organizati­on Secretary-General Petteri Taalas said in a statement Friday.

He noted that E arth’s poles influence weather conditions far away, where hundreds of millions of people live.

WMO previously cited a reading of 38 Celsius in the Russian town of Verkhoyans­k on June 20, which the agency has been seeking to verify as a possible record-high temperatur­e in the Arctic Circle. It comes as fires have swept through the region, with satellite imagery showing the breadth of the area surface.

The agency says the extended heat is linked to a large “blocking pressure system” and northward swing of the jet stream that has injected warm air into the region. But WMO also pointed to a recent study by top climate scientists who found that such a rise in heat would have been nearly impossible without human-caused climate change.

WMO said informatio­n collected by the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center and the U.S. National Ice Center showed the Siberian heat wave had “accelerate­d the ice retreat along the Arctic Russian coast, in particular since late June, leading to very low sea ice extent in the Laptev and Barents Seas.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States