The Washington Post on December 13 quoted a report from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warning that the Arctic experienced its warmest summer this year, threatening an unpredictable future for humans and ecosystems on the planet.
The average surface air temperature in the Arctic from July to September was 6.4 degrees Celsius, the highest since records began in 1900. Worryingly, the Arctic is warming about four times faster than the rest of the world, due to the cumulative loss of reflective ice, a phenomenon known as Arctic amplification. Scientists say this trend is accelerating, with increasingly serious consequences forecast globally.
A severely melting glacier in eastern Greenland
Forest fires, rising sea levels
Warming in parts of northern Canada and the Canadian Arctic Islands coincided with reduced rainfall, leading to severe wildfires this year that have affected many areas of North America, according to Reuters. Although 2023 is not yet over, this year is almost certain to be the hottest on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO). In the latest development, Spain on December 12 recorded its highest December temperature ever after the city of Malaga reached 29.9 degrees Celsius.
Meanwhile, the Danish territory of Greenland lost 196 billion tons of ice between September 2022 and August 2023. Greenland's ice loss this year was lower than the 22-year average due to heavy snowfall, but the heat still took its toll. The warming Arctic has long-term impacts on areas farther afield, while melting ice contributes to rising sea levels, threatening homes, transportation and economic infrastructure in coastal cities, according to the NOAA report. "The irreversible climate impacts of Arctic warming will continue to reverberate across North America and Eurasia," said Brenda Ekwurzel, director of climate science at UCS.
An area of seawater intrusion in the state of Chiapas in Mexico
The Human Climate Horizons program, a collaboration between the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the Climate Impact Lab (USA), estimates that increased coastal flooding this century will affect more than 70 million people worldwide.
Everywhere is in chaos
The rapid warming of the Arctic is also having clear impacts, as it disrupts the global ecosystem. According to AFP, citing expert Tom Ballinger at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (USA), the above situation has different impacts between regions.
“For example, winters in parts of Alaska are colder and wetter, while summers in western Eurasia and northern Canada are drier,” he said. In August, a glacier lake near Juneau, Alaska, burst its dam after two decades of melting, causing flooding and damage along the Mendenhall River.
As the Earth warms, polar bears are forced to dig through trash
Warming trends are having different impacts on ecosystems and human food webs. For example, sockeye salmon in Bristol Bay, Alaska, will be unusually high in 2021 and 2022 due to warmer waters, pushing prices to their lowest levels in decades. Meanwhile, chinook and salmon will see unusually low runs. Climate change is also throwing seasonal interactions between insects and plants out of sync.
Up to 60% of insects are now struggling to keep up with changes in the plants they depend on, as these plants change under the impact of climate change, according to a study presented at the annual meeting of the British Ecological Society in Belfast, which took place from 12 to 15 December.
Nearly 200 countries pledge action
Representatives of nearly 200 countries agreed on December 13 to begin reducing global fossil fuel consumption to prevent the impact of climate change, in an agreement reached at the UN climate conference COP28 in Dubai (UAE). According to Reuters, the agreement calls for a transition away from fossil fuels in the energy system to achieve net zero emissions by 2050, tripling global renewable energy capacity by 2030, efforts to reduce coal use, and accelerating carbon capture technologies.
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