The Oklahoman

The Arctic is on fire: Siberian heat wave alarms scientists

- By Daria Litvinova and Seth Borenstein

MOSCOW — The Arctic is feverish and on fire — at least parts of it are. And that's got scientists worried about what it means for the rest of the world.

The thermomete­r hit a likely record of 38 degrees Celsius ( 1 00.4 degrees Fahrenheit) in the Russian Arctic town of Verkhoyans­k on Saturday, a temperatur­e that would be a fever for a person — but this is Siberia, known for being frozen. The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said Tuesday that it's looking to verify the temperatur­e reading, which would be unpreceden­ted for the region north of the Arctic Circle.

“The Arctic is figurative­ly and literally on fire — it's warming much faster than we thought it would in response to rising levels of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, and this warming is leading to a rapid meltdown and increase in wildfires,” University of Michigan environmen­tal school dean Jonathan Overpeck, a climate scientist, said in an email.

“The record warming in Siberia is a warning sign of major proportion­s,” Overpeck wrote.

Much of Siberia had high temperatur­es this year that were beyond unseasonab­ly warm. From January through May, the average temperatur­e in north-central Siberia has been about 8 degrees Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) above average, according to the climate science non-profit Berkeley Earth.

“That's much, much warmer than it's ever been over that region in that period of time,” Berkeley

Earth climate scientist Zeke Hausfather said.

Siberia is in the Guinness Book of World Records for its extreme temperatur­es. It's a place where the thermomete­r has swung 106 degrees Celsius (190 degrees Fahrenheit), from a low of minus 68 degrees Celsius ( minus 90 Fahrenheit) to now 38 degrees Celsius ( 1 00.4 Fahrenheit).

For residents of the Sakha Republic in the Russian Arctic, a heat wave is not necessaril­y a bad thing. Vasilisa I vanova s pent every day this week with her family swimming and sunbathing.

“We spend the entire day on the shore of the Lena River,” said Ivanova, who lives in the village of Zhigansk, 270 miles (430 kilometers) from where the heat record was set. “We've been coming every day since Monday.”

But for scientists, “alarm bells should be ringing,” Overpeck wrote.

Such prolonged Siberian warmth hasn't been seen for thousands of years “and it is another sign that the Arctic amplifies global warming even more than we thought,” Overpeck said.

Russia's Arctic regions are among the fastest warming areas in the world.

The temperatur­e on Earth over the past few decades has been growing, on average, by 0.18 degrees Celsius ( nearly one-third of a degree Fahrenheit) every 10 years. But in Russia it increases by 0.47 degrees Celsius (0.85 degrees Fahrenheit) — and in the Russian Arctic, by 0.69 degrees Celsius (1.24 degrees Fahrenheit) every decade, said Andrei Kiselyov, the lead scientist at the Moscow-based Voeikov Main Geophysica­l Observator­y.

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