Oldest
sea ice in the arctic starts to melt
Sea
ice north of Greenland - some of the oldest and thickest in the
Arctic - has broken up for the second time this year, a phenomenon
never seen before. Satellite images show ice melting around the coast
of the island closest to the North Pole, opening up waters that are
usually frozen, even in summer.
The
Washington Post totally politicises it. It's all just part of the crusade against Donald Trump
This
is the day that the climate change fight was obviously lost
A
particular challenge of the fight over climate change, if not a
unique one, is that the shifts accrue subtly. The climate has changed
stunningly quickly in global terms but slowly in human terms,
allowing us to rationalize, wave away and downplay.
It’s
that slowness, the ability to adjust to slight changes, that has led
to the political fight over how to address climate change. The
effects of the warming planet are only intermittently tangible, and
there are still winters, and there’s a robust vested interest by
major corporations that sell coal and natural gas and oil in
continuing to sell coal and natural gas and oil.
The
issue of climate change rose to the national consciousness as
polarization in U.S. politics spiked. That national attention was
spurred in part by Al Gore’s 2006 film “An Inconvenient Truth,”
meaning that Gore and his politics became part of the association
many Americans made with the issue. Climate change is now one of the
most politically polarizing issues in the country. Gallup polling
shows that there’s a nearly 50-point gap between the parties in
belief in the effects of a warming planet having already begun. More
than 8 in 10 Democrats think global warming has been demonstrated;
only a third of Republicans agree.
A
new study also reveals that some areas in the Arctic are no longer
freezing, suggesting that areas that have been frozen for centuries
are at risk of thawing. When they do so, plant material that has been
frozen could begin to decompose, releasing methane into the
atmosphere. Methane is much better at trapping heat than carbon
dioxide.
Elsewhere
in the Arctic, the annual minimum in sea ice coverage has been
steadily dropping, meaning that less and less of the Arctic Ocean is
covered by ice. This year is well below the norm in terms of August
coverage.
But
then came a new report Tuesday with worse news: For the first time on
record, the thickest Arctic sea ice began to break apart this year.
“The
thinning is reaching even the coldest part of the Arctic with the
thickest ice,” Walt Meier, a senior research scientist at the
National Snow and Ice Data Center told the Guardian. “So it’s a
pretty dramatic indication of the transformation of the Arctic sea
ice and Arctic climate.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.