| Arctic
Ice Shrinking Due
to Global Warming
Yahoo-News
Posted August 20, 2003
OSLO (Reuters) - Global warming will melt most of the Arctic
icecap in summertime by the end of the century, a report showed
Wednesday.
The three-year international study indicated that ice around
the North Pole had shrunk by 7.4 percent in the past 25 years
with a record small summer coverage in September 2002.
"The summer ice cover in the Arctic may be reduced by
80 percent at the end of the 21st century," said Norwegian
Professor Ola Johannessen, the main author of the report funded
by the European Commission.
The Arctic Barents Sea north of Russia and Norway could be
free of ice even in winter by the end of the century, said
Johannesssen, who works at the Nansen Environmental and Remote
Sensing Center in Norway.
"This will make it easier to explore for oil, it could
open the Northern Sea Route (between the Atlantic and Pacific
oceans)," he said of the report, dubbed the Arctic Ice
Cover Simulation Experiment.
Moscow and Norway reckon the Barents Sea could be a promising
new area for oil and gas. The Northern Sea passage could save
shippers about 10 days on a trip from Japan to Europe compared
to traveling through the Suez Canal.
Johannessen said that the report, published on the Internet
ahead of peer review, also indicated that a recent thinning
of the polar icecap was linked to human emissions of gases
like carbon dioxide blamed for blanketing the planet.
But the study showed a thinning of the icecap from 1920-1940
was caused by natural climate fluctuations, such as ocean
currents and winds, rather than by a build-up of greenhouse
gases.
Johannessen said the new survey added to evidence of a gradual
thinning of the icecap and gave firmer signs that human emissions,
such as exhausts from cars and factories, were mainly to blame.
Climate experts say that polar areas are heating up more
than other regions.
Yahoo-News
- Back
to News Home -
|