ABC America
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The Arctic is the "frontline" for climate change, scientists said.
ABC News Chief Meteorologist Ginger Zee discusses the global impact of
climate change.
Sergio Pitamitz/VWPics via AP Images, FILE. 1min 39sec
If there is any doubt about climate change, look no further than the coldest
regions of the planet for proof that the planet is warming at unprecedented
rates, experts say.
The Arctic, is
heating up twice as fast as the rest of the world, according to this year's Arctic Report Card, released last week by the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The phenomenon, known as
Arctic amplification, occurs when the sea ice, which is white, thins or
disappears, allowing dark ocean or land surfaces to absorb more heat from the
sun and release that energy back into the atmosphere.
Widely considered by polar scientists as Earth's refrigerator due to its role
in regulating global temperatures, the mass melting of sea ice, permafrost and
ice caps in the Arctic is hard evidence of global warming, according to
experts.
"The Arctic is the frontline for climate change," climate scientist Jessica
Moerman, vice president of science and policy at the Evangelical Environmental
Network, a faith-based environmental group, told ABC News. "We should be
paying careful attention to what is happening in the Arctic. It may seem like
it's far away, but the impacts come knocking on our front door."
Here is how melting in the Arctic could have detrimental effects around the globe, according to experts:
Coastal communities will eventually need to move inland
The biggest long-term effect of warming in the Arctic will be sea level rise,
Oscar Schofield, a professor of biological oceanography at Rutgers University,
told ABC News.
Melting from he Arctic -- and the
Greenland ice sheet
in particular -- is the largest contributor to sea level rise in the world.
Although the contribution from the Greenland ice sheet is less than a
millimeter per year of rising sea level, those small increments add up to
between 6 inches to a foot since the Industrial Revolution -- sea levels that
infrastructure near oceans was not built to withstand, Schofield said.
A bit "counterintuitively," the loss from the Greenland ice sheet will have
its greatest impact on places far away from the Arctic, in low latitudes such
as South America due to changes in the global ocean currents, Twila Moon, an
Arctic scientist with the National Snow and Ice Data Center and one of the
authors of the Arctic Report Card, told ABC News.
A drop of water falls off an iceberg melting in the Nuup Kangerlua
Fjord near Nuuk in southwestern Greenland, Aug. 1, 2017.
David Goldman/AP, FILE |
Sea level rise from melting and continued climate change will exacerbate
coastal erosion, flood areas that had previously never seen flooding and even
increase inland flooding as the salty ocean waters change groundwater tables
and inundate freshwater resources, Moon said.
"If you look at where humanity lives, a great proportion of humanity lives
right at the coastlines around the world," he said. "And if you look at where
most of the big, mega cities are, they're right along coastlines: New York,
Los Angeles, San Francisco."
Global weather systems will shift drastically
"What happens in the Arctic doesn't stay in the Arctic," Moerman said.
The jet stream, a band of strong winds moving west to east created by cold air meeting warmer air, helps to regulate weather around the globe. In the continental U.S., the jet stream forms where generally colder and drier Arctic air meets warmer and more humid air from the Gulf.
But as temperatures in the Arctic warm, the jet stream, which is fueled by the temperature differences, weakens, Moerman said. Rather than a steady stream of winds, the jet stream has become more "wavy," allowing very warm temperatures to extend usually far into the Arctic and very cold temperatures further south than usual, Moon said.
"These cold air outbreaks are really severe," Moerman said.
The variability in the climate in the Arctic, specifically the weakening of the polar vortex, which keeps cold air closer to the poles, likely led to the Texas freeze in February that led to millions without power and hundreds of deaths, a study published in Science in September found.
The study cited an "increasingly frequent number of episodes of extremely cold winter weather over the past four decades" in the U.S., despite temperatures rising overall.
Icebergs and the edge of the ice sheet are seen at the west coast
close to Tasiilaq, Greenland, Sept. 17, 2021.
Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters, FILE |
That stagnation was likely the cause of the extreme flooding that occurred in 2017 in Houston, when the system from Hurricane Harvey remained over the region for days, dumping more than 50 inches of rain, and the multiple heatwaves that blanketed much of the Pacific Northwest this past summer, Moerman added.
"These have real-world impacts, whenever extreme cold air leaks out of the Arctic, because of that weakening polar vortex," Moerman said. "And it goes into areas that are not prepared for that extreme weather."
However, despite the existing evidence, more research needs to be done to further establish the link between the weakening polar vortex and extreme weather, Moerman said.
Shipping lanes will open
Melting sea ice in the Arctic is opening up lanes in the ocean for the global trade route -- lanes that were previously blocked.
In the near future, the melting will have a big impacts on major shipping laws, Schofield said.
"They're no longer going to be sending ships all the way down to the Panama Canal," he said. "They're going to go directly through the Arctic. And so it's going to change commerce, and have very large economic impacts."
The Russian "50 Years of Victory" nuclear-powered icebreaker is
seen at the North Pole on Aug. 18, 2021. Ekaterina Anisimova/AFP via Getty Images, FILE
|
"There's a lot of effort by countries to really try to claim as much territory as they can right now, because there's likely going to be a huge host of economic incentives to go to this new area and harvest what you can," Schofield said.
Some national security implications could occur as a result of the warming as well, as ice melts and opens up previously blocked landmasses, Moerman added. The U.S. Department of Defense will likely need to restructure its defense profile in the Arctic when there is no longer an ice cap for much of the year, Schofield said.
The pristine ecosystem will likely be ruined
As the woes from a stalled supply chain continue, the ability for shipping containers to utilize more routes in the absence of ice could appear to be beneficial for the world economy.
But it would spell disaster for the regional environment.
Right now, the ecosystem in the Arctic is pristine and untouched, and there are several unique species and ecosystems that have acclimated to the presence of ice, Schofield said.
But as more ships come in and out of the region, the chances that large-scale environmental degradation will occur is high, Moerman said.
"We're definitely seeing changes in animal populations," Moon said. "Certainly animals that depend on sea ice as a primary habitat, as we've lost the vast majority of our thicker sea ice."
A view of icebergs and melting pack ice in Ilulissat icefjord, an
UNESCO World Heritage Site, in Ilulissat, Greenland.
Sergio Pitamitz/VWPics via AP Images, FILE |
The "poster child" for the effects of the loss of sea ice on species is the
polar bear, Schofield said. Polar bear populations have dwindled so low, and
the habitats have become so fragmented, that
the animals are inbreeding, which could have disastrous effects on the survival of the species within
generations.
In Alaska, the number of beaver ponds has doubled since 2000, likely due to
the warming trend that has resulted in widespread greening in what was
previously tundra, the Arctic Report Card found. The rapid acidification of
the warming ocean waters is likely affecting the marine food chain, Moon said.
And the increased marine traffic for both fishing and shipping is also likely
affecting stress levels and behavior of species, including how they
communicate, Moon added.
In addition to an increased chance of oil spills from increased commercial
activity is the possibility of new oil and gas fields opening up in Russian
territory could further amplify global warming as those natural gases are
extracted, Moerman said.
"The question is, is can we get those policies and strategies set up now
before there's this massive sort of gold rush on the Arctic Ocean?" Schofield
said.
Melting permafrost in the Arctic also poses natural environmental risks, Moon
said. The majority of the ground in the Arctic is frozen, and as it thaws,
microbes and other living organisms within the organic carbon in the
permafrost begin to wake up, releasing carbon dioxide and methane into the
atmosphere.
Temperatures need to be below 0 degrees Celsius to grow and maintain ice,
Schofield said. But we will likely never regain that ice, as it took thousands
of years of snow layers accumulating on top of each other to create the
massive ice sheet, which is several miles thick.
"At some point, we're likely to cross the line where, you know, there'll be
almost no winter to speak up," Schofield said. "And we see these kinds of
effects in these polar regions, like the Arctic and the Antarctic."
Links
- The Arctic is warming twice as fast as the rest of the world, according to NOAA report
- What to know about the rapid melting of the Greenland ice sheet, a significant contributor to rising sea levels
- Polar bears are inbreeding due to melting sea ice, posing risk to survival of the species, scientists say
- (Washington Post) Climate Change Has Destabilized The Earth’s Poles, Putting The Rest Of The Planet In Peril
- The Arctic could get more rain and less snow sooner than projected. Here’s why that matters.
- Adrift in the Arctic: The biggest North Pole expedition in history aims to understand climate change
- A critical ocean system may be heading for collapse due to Arctic warming
- Radical warming in Siberia leaves millions on unstable ground
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