Toronto Star

Arctic temperatur­es surge as carbon dioxide hits record level

- JASON SAMENOW

Over the weekend, the climate system sounded simultaneo­us alarms. Near the entrance to the Arctic Ocean in northwest Russia, the temperatur­e surged to 29 C.

Meanwhile, the concentrat­ion of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere eclipsed 415 parts per million for the first time in human history.

By themselves, these are just data points. But taken together with so many indicators of an altered atmosphere and rising temperatur­es, they blend into the unmistakab­le portrait of human-induced climate change.

Saturday’s steamy reading was posted in Arkhangels­k, Russia, where the average high temperatur­e is around 12 C this time of year. The city of 350,000 people sits next to the White Sea, which feeds into the Arctic Ocean’s Barents Sea.

In Koynas, a rural area to the east of Arkhangels­k, it was even hotter on Sunday, soaring to 30.6 C. Many locations in Russia, from the Kazakh border to the White Sea, set record-high temperatur­es over the weekend. The warmth also bled west into Finland, which hit 25 C Saturday, the country’s warmest temperatur­e of the season so far.

The abnormally warm conditions in this region stemmed from a bulging zone of high pressure centred over western Russia. This particular heat wave, while a manifestat­ion of the arrangemen­t of weather systems and fluctuatio­ns in the jet stream, fits into what has been an unusually warm year across the Arctic and most of the mid-latitudes.

In Greenland, for example, the ice sheet’s melt season began about a month early. In Alaska, several rivers saw winter ice break up on their earliest dates on record.

Across the Arctic overall, the extent of sea ice has hovered near a record low for weeks.

Data from the Japan Meteorolog­ical Agency show April was the second warmest on record for the entire planet.

These changes have occurred against the backdrop of unremittin­g increases in carbon dioxide, which has now crossed another symbolic threshold.

Saturday’s carbon dioxide measuremen­t of 415 parts per million at Hawaii’s Mauna Loa Observator­y is the highest in at least 800,000 years and probably over three million years. Carbon dioxide levels have risen by nearly 50 per cent since the Industrial Revolution.

Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas that, along with the rise of several other such heattrappi­ng gases, is the primary cause of climate warming in recent decades, scientists have concluded.

Eighteen of the 19 warmest years on record for the planet have occurred since 2000.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ??
DAVID GOLDMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada