Canadian
expedition spotlights thinning Arctic sea ice
28
September, 2013
(CBS
News) NEW YORK - From afar, we watched this summer as four
Vancouver-based men launched their custom-made, kevlar-coated, wood
and fiberglass row boat, the Arctic Joule, from Canada's Northwest
territory in early July, heading east, toward Greenland.
The
rowers -- Kevin Vallely and Frank Wolf, from Canada, with Denis
Barnett and Paul Gleeson, originally from Ireland -- set out to
navigate part of the mythic Northwest Passage, the Arctic waters
between Europe and Asia, a long-sought shortcut between the Pacific
and Atlantic oceans.
For
centuries, frozen ice made this sea route impassable. But the
thinning Arctic sea ice, particularly during the summer melting
season, has opened up the waters like never before.
"Warming
of the climate system is unequivocal," stated the latest report
from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, published Friday.
"The atmosphere and ocean have warmed, the amounts of snow and
ice have diminished, sea level has risen, and the concentrations of
greenhouse gases have increased."
The
IPCC called the last three decades the warmest 30 year period of the
last 1,400 years and found most of the gained heat has been stored in
the oceans, spurring the melting of the polar ice caps. The panel
forecast sea levels could rise three more feet by the end of this
century.
Last
year, summer Arctic ice covered the smallest area since satellite
measurements began, according to the National Snow & Ice Data
Center, in Colorado. This summer was the sixth smallest area.
Calling
themselves the Mainstream Last First expedition, named after their
sponsor, Mainstream Renewable Power, the rowers followed the route of
Norwegian explorer Ronald Amundsen when he sailed the passage between
1903-06, the first documented successful voyage.
"Countless
explorers have died in the Northwest Passage just because it's been
chock full of ice over hundreds of years," said rower Kevin
Vallely. "There's still ice up there, but there's far less ice
than there was before, and we really wanted to bring awareness to
that by traversing it solely under human power in a 25 foot row
boat."
Their
motto, painted on the boat, was "pulling together against
climate change." The was no engine and no sails on board. Just
two men at a time rowing, changing shifts every three hours.
"We
did go for 50, 60, 70 hours at a time, and we got into the groove of
doing that. You get a little sleep-deprived, but you do get your
naps," Vallely said. "We needed to keep moving."
Their
determined movements covered, on average, 21 miles a day. When the
crew took a break to sleep, they typically dropped anchor at sea and
snuggled in sleeping bags below deck in a tiny cabin most of us would
find claustrophobic.
"At
anchor, we could all four of us just squeeze in there kind of like
sardines," rower Frank Wolf said. "Imagine like four dudes
in boat about a month in having eaten just freeze dried food -- what
that would have smelled like."
There
were no baths, unless the rowers took a dip in the frigid waters.
Promoting
alternative energy sources, three solar panels built into the boat
powered their GPS and a desalinator that let them drink converted sea
water.
Part
of the mission was data collection for the Canadian Department of
Oceans and Fisheries, so the rowers took measurements of the ice and
water.
The
rowers, ranging in age from 32 to 49, were all experienced
adventurers. Vallely had trekked on skis across the South Pole in
record time. Wolf has cycled the frozen Yukon to the northern coast
of Alaska. Gleeson and Barnett had rowed the Atlantic.
But
the Arctic adventure came with its own special danger.
"A
piece of ice actually came in when we were sleeping at anchor and
pinned our boat and was actually pulling us underneath the ice,"
Wolf said.
That
ice was 40 feet thick. Vallely cut the boat's anchor so they could
escape.
"The
reality is this ice is supposed to be up at the pole. It's breaking
up now," Vallely said.
Besides
thinning ice, wildlife was another indicator of climate change.
They
expected to see herds of musk-ox and caribou -- and did -- but it was
a surprise to see grizzly bears roaming in polar bear country.
"They're
seeing all these species up there that never used to be up there
coming up from the South and now living in the Arctic," Wolf
said.
In
case the grizzlies set their sights on them, the rowers slept with a
shotgun but never had to use it.
In
the end, wind was their worst enemy, impeding their progress and
sometimes making it impossible to row for entire days.
"It
was the journey that mattered the most. We learned so much out there,
and we tried everything we could," Vallely said. "Where we
stopped we had to stop."
The
rowers suspended their journey earlier this month after 55 days and
1,163 miles, reaching Victoria Island, about 700 miles short of their
goal, but making it halfway to Greenland.
Wolf,
an experienced environmental filmmaker, whose last release, "On
The Line" discusses the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline
project, documented the Arctic rowing trip and is planning to put
together a feature film about it.
"Things
are melting up there and changing up there. It's going to raise sea
levels worldwide," Wolf said. "It's going to affect people
in New York City; it's going to affect people in Los Angeles; it's
going to affect people in any kind of coastal community."
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