The Guardian (USA)

Greenhouse gas emissions transformi­ng the Arctic into 'an entirely different climate'

- Oliver Milman in New York

The Arctic’s rapid transforma­tion into a less frozen, hotter and biological­ly altered place has been further exacerbate­d by a year of wildfires, soaring temperatur­es and loss of ice, US scientists have reported.

The planet’s northern polar region recorded its second hottest 12-month period to September 2020, with the warmest temperatur­es since 1900 all now occurring within the past seven years, according to an annual Arctic report card issued by the National Ocean and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (Noaa).

The Arctic is heating up at a rate around double that of the global average, due to the human-caused climate crisis.

Some places were abnormally hot in 2020, with parts of Siberia 9F (5C) above the long-term average in the first half of the year. In June, the Siberian town of Verkhoyans­k reached 100.4°F, the hottest temperatur­e ever recorded north of the Arctic Circle.

Meanwhile, Arctic sea ice shrank to its second lowest summer extent in the 42-year satellite record in 2020, with the loss of ice and surging ocean heat causing a burst of ocean plant growth and altered behavior of bowhead whales.

On land, fierce wildfires tore through parts of the Arctic region while the melting of permafrost and retreat of ice is increasing­ly turning parts of the Arctic green with sprouting vegetation.

“It has been yet another year of breathtaki­ng changes in the Arctic,” said Jennifer Francis, the senior scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center. “Temperatur­es in Siberia have been off the charts most of the year, and the Arctic passages have been open for shipping much longer than any previous year.”

The vast Greenland ice sheet lost mass again in 2020, albeit at a slower rate than last year, the report card states.

The continual melting of the world’s glaciers is fueling sea level rise, threatenin­g coastal cities with flooding. Scientists have been closely monitoring the ice sheet, as well as its equivalent in Antarctica, to ascertain how the huge changes under way will impact the environmen­t.

A tumultuous year in the Arctic has seen the last fully intact ice shelf in Canada collapse after losing more than 40% of its area in just two days, while thawing permafrost caused a disastrous oil spill in Russia after a fuel tank collapsed.

The latest scientific warning over the changing Arctic will provide further urgency to internatio­nal climate talks to mark the fifth anniversar­y of the Paris climate agreement.

“The Arctic is transition­ing from a predominan­tly frozen state into an entirely different climate, due to emissions of greenhouse gases,” said Laura Landrum, the associate scientist at the US National Center for Atmospheri­c Research Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory.

“If we do not bring emission rates down, Arctic climate will change so significan­tly that this year’s record low sea ice extents will look large and record warm temperatur­es will appear cool compared to what we will experience in the future.”

Zack Labe, a postdoctor­al researcher at Colorado State University, said the Arctic is “yelling at us to pay attention”. He added: “Unless we slow global warming by systematic­ally reducing our greenhouse gas emissions, the chances of our first ‘icefree’ Arctic summer will continue to increase. This rapid climate change in the Arctic will continue to have consequenc­es for the entire Earth system.”

 ?? Photograph: Natalie Thomas/Reuters ?? Arctic sea ice shrank to its second lowest summer extent in the 42-year satellite record in 2020.
Photograph: Natalie Thomas/Reuters Arctic sea ice shrank to its second lowest summer extent in the 42-year satellite record in 2020.

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