Tuesday, 21 September 2010 08:39
Russia's deadly heatwave has refocused attention on climate change and on Russian and American prophecies of an ice-free summertime Arctic within the coming decades.
President of the Russian Geographic Society, Emergencies Minister Sergei Shoigu has been speaking about this for the press ahead of an international forum on Arctic problems, which opens in Moscow on Wednesday: An Arctic meltdown and a parallel two-foot rise of the ocean over the next two decades may destroy the livelihoods of up to 800 million people. The problem is urgent and cannot be allowed to be left unaddressed.
The Russian geographer Professor Igor Davydenko also sees a silver lining:True, South Asia, South America and Africa are probably in for unheard of drought. Russia, however, may start reaping boons. A global temperature rise of half a degree Celsius would spell a quick retreat of the Siberian permafrost. New vast bogs would emerge, but in the end, this country would have more and more arable land.
Adding to the controversy is the fact that the academic jury is still out on whether man is to blame for the global warm-up.


