Russia
warming '2.5 times quicker' than global average: ministry
Maria Antonov
25
December, 2015
Russia
is warming more than twice as fast as the average for the rest of the
world, the environment ministry said Friday, sounding an alarm on the
rise in floods and wildfires nationwide.
A
government report on environmental protection said temperatures in
Russia had warmed by 0.42 degrees Celsius per decade since 1976, or
2.5 times quicker than the global warming trend of 0.17 degrees.
"Climate
change leads to growth of dangerous meteorological phenomena,"
the ministry said in a comment to the report published Friday.
There
were 569 such phenomena in Russia in 2014, "the most since
monitoring began," the ministry said, specifically mentioning
last year's ravaging floods and this year's "water deficit"
east of Lake Baikal, which led to a "catastrophic rise in
fires."
Fires
around Lake Baikal, including the nearby Irkutsk and Buryatia
regions, tore through hundreds of square miles in the pristine area,
with locals and campers forced to dig ditches as state media at one
point offered the theory that fires were fuelled by "self-igniting
air" caused by ozone anomalies.
Climate
change has contributed to unprecedented loss of water in the Baikal
itself, dropping to minimal water levels allowed by the government
several times this year, including this week.
"The
level of Baikal has dropped to 456.1 metres (above sea level),"
despite minimal water use by hydropower stations downstream on the
Angara river, environment ministry spokesman Nikolai Gudkov told
RIA-Novosti agency Friday.
'Earthquakes,
landslides, flash floods'
President
Vladimir Putin rarely voices concerns about climate change, having
famously said in the past that a little warming would not hurt the
country and seeing it as a boon for Arctic development.
Experts
however have cautioned that warming could hurt energy infrastructure
on permafrost in Siberia and increase other risks.
The
report states that while Russia is warming on the whole, some areas
in the Far East and southern Siberia are experiencing harsh winters.
Out-of-control
fires and deadly floods have hit Russia nearly every year this
decade, and the emergency situations ministry in October conceded it
has to come up with a new strategy.
"There
are new threats in face of climate
change,"
emergencies minister Vladimir Puchkov said at a conference in
October, adding they require "new measures to protect
infrastructure."
"Permafrost
is receding, there are earthquakes where there weren't before, there
are landslides, flash floods, blow-outs of gas condensate and so on,"
he said.
World
nations earlier this month reached a climate accord in Paris which
sets the goal of limiting global warming to "well below"
two degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels, though experts warn
that emissions-curbing pledges may be too little too late.
While
the total emission of greenhouse gases in Russia has not grown over
the past five years, car emissions are increasing.
Half
of Russia's auto transport still consists of inefficient vehicles
with polluting engines over a decade old, the report said.
Weather
in Moscow and surrounding regions has been abnormally warm in recent
days, with historic temperature records broken every day of the past
week, the latest on Thursday with 8.5 degrees Celsius (47 degrees
Fahrenheit) in Moscow.
The
warmth led city hall to close the capital's ice rinks, while bees
left their beehives and snowdrops suddenly bloomed in Moscow's parks.
Record high winter
temperature set in Moscow
A
winter maximum temperature record for Moscow was set Friday, the
capital's weather bureau said Friday.
Snowman in Kaliningrad, Russia
MOSCOW,
December 15 (RIA Novosti) - A winter maximum temperature record
forMoscow was
set Friday, the capital's weather bureau said Friday.
Friday's
maximum of 8.6°C (47.48°F) is the highest winter temperature on
record for the Russian capital, the spokesman said.
The
previous winter record for Moscow was 8.1 °C (46.5°F), set on
February 17, 1989.
Extreme
deviations in weather patterns have been observed before, but over
the past decade they have become more and more frequent, the Federal
Service for Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring said.
Following
near-record low temperatures during last winter's cold spell, which
saw the mercury plummet to -31°C (-23.8°F) January 19 - one degree
above the all-time low for Moscow - European Russia has experienced
record warm temperatures this month.
Forecasters
believe the temperature may be even higher in coming days, possibly
reaching 9°C (48.2 °F).
Another unusual feature for me: several times this past week, the daily high temperature occurred around 3 am, about 6 hours before sunrise. (I live about 30 miles northeast of Moscow.)
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