San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

TROOPS FACE NEW TESTS IN WARMING ARCTIC

Militaries learning to adapt to more extreme variations

- BY DANIELLE BOCHOVE & NATALIA DROZDIAK Bochove and Drozdiak write for Bloomberg News.

When 600 Dutch marines sawed holes in a frozen Norway fjord last month as part of their Arctic training exercises, and then took turns deliberate­ly skiing into them, everything seemed to be going according to plan.

But when it came time to claw themselves back onto the ice, in their sodden winter gear, they encountere­d an unexpected problem. It was too warm.

“Normally the technique is that when you come out, you roll yourself dry in dry snow, but now it was 8 degrees (Celsius, or 46 Fahrenheit), so the top layer was completely wet,” said Commodore Jeanette Morang of the Royal Netherland­s Navy. “Their clothing froze up.”

Challenges preparing for conflict in a part of the world where temperatur­es can fall to minus 76 degrees Fahrenheit are nothing new. Lack of skis — or the skill to use them — hindered allied efforts to help Norway push back German forces in 1940. The same year, Finland’s Arctic expertise, including the use of skis and reindeer, helped it inflict disproport­ionate casualties on Russian troops during The Winter War.

But what’s always been tough is getting tougher as climate change causes more extreme weather and temperatur­e fluctuatio­ns in an environmen­t that has always pushed soldiers to their limits. Collapsing permafrost, unpredicta­ble ice on frozen lakes and seas — even rain — are creating new challenges throughout the Arctic. At the same time, geopolitic­al tensions are heightenin­g its military importance as global warming opens the region to new economic opportunit­ies, including lucrative trade routes and untapped natural resources.

NATO’S Centre of Excellence-cold Weather Operations has seen a surge in demand for Arctic warfare competenci­es as NATO members have begun focusing more on the north, said Lt. Col. Simen Sandum, deputy director of the organizati­on.

“I think that’s a result of the geopolitic­al change with Russia and their war in Ukraine, climate change, and the possibilit­ies that opens in the Arctic,” he said. “We now have a huge shift where we have to take into considerat­ion our own protection in North America, and the Northern Atlantic, Northern Europe, where suddenly China and Russia have shifted to be a lot more interested in our areas.”

Norway has long been NATO’S top choice for northern training because of its naturally wide range of conditions: coastal, mountain and inland weather systems as well as Arctic, sub-arctic and temperate cold. But as Arctic warming accelerate­s, Sandum says the country, along with much of Scandinavi­a, is seeing even greater temperatur­e swings, variations in snow conditions and difference­s between regions.

At minus 76 degrees skin freezes in under a minute, but overheatin­g can also be a problem, especially if temperatur­es change quickly. Perspirati­on needs to be managed; moisture increases the risk of hypothermi­a and trench foot. Temporary Arctic shelters need to be equipped to dry clothing.

“If you get cold and you get wet, you get even colder,” Sandum said. “And it does something with both the morale, the physical ability of the unit and the psychologi­cal ability of the unit to conduct operations.”

When snow gets inside equipment, melts and then refreezes, it can malfunctio­n. Temperatur­es hovering around freezing are more likely to require chemicals on runways to reduce ice, which can damage the engines of fighter jets unless they’re immediatel­y cleaned.

Arctic nations with permafrost, like the U.S. and Canada, are experienci­ng engineerin­g challenges. A report from the Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Defense last April examined the military readiness of U.S. bases in the Arctic and sub-arctic and concluded leaders were not doing enough to adapt to climate-related changes.

More extreme, less predictabl­e weather leaves less room for error — every small detail needs to be considered, from rememberin­g where you put your mittens to cleaning the snow out of the tracks in your vehicle before it melts and refreezes, said Sindre Hagensen, a sergeant major with the Norwegian Artillery Battalion with 25 years of military experience.

“We prefer definitely cold, stable conditions,” Hagensen said. “Good oldfashion­ed winter: It’s easy. Things stay dry.”

 ?? DANIELLE BOCHOVE BLOOMBERG ?? A CV90 infantry fighting vehicle is seen near Bardufoss, Norway, during Joint Viking military exercises with NATO forces on March 8.
DANIELLE BOCHOVE BLOOMBERG A CV90 infantry fighting vehicle is seen near Bardufoss, Norway, during Joint Viking military exercises with NATO forces on March 8.

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