BFF-66 Arctic’s record warming driving ‘broad change’ in environment: study

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CLIMATE-US-RESEARCH, LEAD

Arctic’s record warming driving ‘broad change’ in environment: study

WASHINGTON, Dec 11, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Global warming is heating the Arctic
at a record pace, driving broad environmental changes across the planet,
including extreme storms in the United States and Europe, a major US
scientific report said Tuesday.

Persistent heat records have assaulted the fragile Arctic for each of the
past five years — a record-long warming streak, said the 2018 Arctic Report
Card, released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The mounting heat in the north is upsetting typical weather patterns, a
trend that “coincides” with severe winter storms in the eastern United States
and an extreme cold snap in Europe in March, it said.

“Continued warming of the Arctic atmosphere and ocean are driving broad
change in the environmental system in predicted and, also, unexpected ways,”
warned the report.

“New and rapidly emerging threats are taking form and highlighting the
level of uncertainty in the breadth of environmental change that is to come.”

Emily Osborne, program manager of NOAA’s Arctic Research Program, told
reporters the Arctic “is experiencing the most unprecedented transition in
human history.”

The report was released at the American Geophysical Union’s annual
conference in Washington, just weeks after another damning climate assessment
by federal scientists which US President Donald Trump dismissed, saying he
did not “believe” it.

Asked by reporters if he had personally briefed Trump on the latest Arctic
findings, NOAA acting administrator Timothy Gallaudet said he had not, but he
insisted that NOAA has the White House’s support when it comes to scientific
research.

– Temperature records –

Arctic air temperatures for the past five years, from 2014 to 2018, “have
exceeded all previous records since 1900,” when record-keeping began, said
the peer-reviewed report compiled by 81 scientists working for governments
and academia in 12 nations.

This warming trend “is unlike any other period on record,” it said.

During the latest period studied, October 2017 through September 2018,
annual average temperature in the Arctic was 3.1 Fahrenheit (1.7 Celsius)
higher than the 1981-2010 average.

“The year 2018 was the second warmest year on record in the Arctic since
1900 (after 2016),” it said.

The Arctic also saw the second-lowest overall sea-ice coverage and the
lowest recorded winter ice in the Bering Sea.

Another key measure of ice cover is its age, and the old, thick kind is
rapidly disappearing across the Arctic.

Last year, old ice made up less than one percent of the ice pack.

Over the past 33 years, very old Arctic ice has declined by 95 percent.

– Jet stream –

The Arctic continues to heat up at twice the rate of the rest of the
planet, but the effects are far from isolated, and are now spilling over into
the mid-latitudes.

That’s because a warmer Arctic reduces the north-south temperature
difference, which provides the main fuel for the polar jet stream, or a river
of strong wind, at levels where jet aircraft fly, NOAA said.

In this warming environment, the jet stream has become wavier, a pattern
that “allows warm air to penetrate farther north and cold air to plunge
farther south, compared to when the jet is strong and relatively straight,”
said the report.

Scientist now see evidence that this changing jet stream may be sparking
extreme storms.

Examples include “the heat wave at the North Pole in autumn 2017, a swarm
of severe winter storms in the eastern United States in 2018, and the extreme
cold outbreak in Europe in March 2018 known as the ‘Beast from the East.'”

– Reindeer, marine life –

Meanwhile, warmer Arctic temperatures are wreaking havoc on the Arctic
ecosystem, decimating reindeer and caribou populations, allowing harmful
algae blooms to move northward and sickening marine life, said the report,
now in its 13th year.

“Considerable concentrations of algal toxins have been found in the tissues
of Arctic clams, seals, walrus, and whales and other marine organisms,” it
said.

Even though melting ice has freed up more land for grazing, herds of
caribou and wild reindeer across the Arctic tundra have declined by 56
percent over the last two decades, cutting populations from 4.7 million to
2.1 million.

“The long-term warming trend may be taking a toll on some of the Arctic’s
most majestic animals,” said Howard Epstein, professor of environmental
sciences at the University of Virginia.

Scientists attribute the decline to increased frequency of drought, which
affects quality of the tundra, and longer and hotter summers which can lead
to more parasites.

Another new focus of the report involved the emerging threat of marine
microplastics, which scientists have discovered are accumulating in the
Arctic at higher concentrations than anywhere else in the world.

“This pollution — from plastics produced and discarded in more populated
areas of the world — is likely traveling with ocean currents to the Arctic,”
said Karen Frey, professor of geography at Clark University.

Microplastic contamination has increased over the last decade, and is a
concern because seabirds and marine life can ingest debris, sickening them
and interfering with a key food and income source for people who consume
them, she said.

BSS/AFP/MRI/2325 hrs