Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Impacts of Global
Warming on the Arctic
- Environmental Impacts
- Increased extent and no. of Northern Coniferous
(boreal forest) fires in Arctic Russia
- 10 million
burn each year
- Losing 0.8% of the
world's coniferous forest
- Boreal ecosystems = 37% of
the world's carbon pool on land
- They are effective carbon sinks
- A forest, ocean, or other natural environment that
absorbs carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
- Tree line moving North
into higher altitudes
- The edge of the
habitat where
trees grow
- Thawing out
of permafrost
- Permanently frozen ground
- Releases large quantities
of stored methane
- ENHANCED
GREENHOUSE
EFFECT
- 1kg of methane will create the same
warming as 21kg of carbon doixide
- The ground becomes softer
which could lead to sinking of
buildings and infrastructure
- Siberia
- Cracks have appeared in
roads and airport runways
- Allows easier oil extraction
+ large scale agriculture
- Up to 40% of total amount (esp. in Siberia)
- Tundra ecosystems being lost
- Changes in biodiversity
- Northern shift of
certain species
- Increased
coastal
erosion
- Land weakening after
permafrost melts
- More waves and storm surges
- Less protection of sea ice
- Socio-economic Impacts
- Threatening 155,000
Inuit inhabitants
- Weaker and thinner sea ice collapses
- Exposed to more ocean
waves and storms
- Less ice to act as a natural barrier
- High risk of flooding
- 24 Inuit villages in Alaska
are constantly under threat
- Decline in marine stocks
- Affects food
and income
source
- 70% of Inuit income is from paid
employment or hunting-fishing
- To import replacement food would cost US
$1m and provide less iron, magnesium and
calcium then the natural diet
- Loss of hunting culture + food
security for indigenous peoples
- Ecological Impacts
- Warmer water = reduced
quantity of marine plants
- Less plants = less smaller
+ bigger fish species (e.g. halibut)
- This means less larger marine
species (e.g. seals) = less polar bears
- NEGATIVE
MULTIPLIER
EFFECT
- Hudson Bay is now ice-free for 3
weeks longer than it was in 1985
- Less time for polar bears to
hunt the reduced no. of seals
- Less body fat = less chance
of survival during summer
- ALTERNATIVELY: less ice = more sunlight
for phytoplankton = more fish (that eat it) =
more seals = more polar bears
- Certain
species may
face extinction
- Positive Impacts
- Greater run-off = increased amount of
nutrients + sediment = more coastal +
wetland bog ecosystems = more habitats
- Annual freshwater run-off into Arctic
Ocean predicted to rise by 15% (Siberia)
- NEGATIVES
- Releases methane
- Can impact OCEAN CURRENTS /
THERMOHALINE CIRCULATION
- E.g. North Atlantic Drift that keeps North-West Europe warm
- Increased access for marine
shipping between Europe
through the Pacific to Asia
- Majorly cuts cost of
exporting products
- NEGATIVES
- Could lead to further
exploitation of Arctic
- Greater frequent use of passage
increases risk of pollution and oil spills
- Russia starts to allow
nuclear wast disposal
- Before: only open 6
weeks in Aug-Oct
- Future: 120 days of ice free route by end of century
- 2007: North West Passage between Canada + Arctic melted
enough to allow shipping through for the first time
- The Northern Sea Route