Thursday, 23 September 2010 08:06
An accelerating global warm-up these days is likely to result in ice-free Arctic summers and a half-metre rise of the ocean in the coming decades.
Russian and Norwegian scientists told this to an international forum on Arctic problems in Moscow on Wednesday.
Their findings suggest catastrophic change which makes rivalry for Arctic resources secondary to cooperative efforts to explore the High Arctic.
The Kremlin aide for environment and climate issues Professor Alexander Bedritski had this to say:"There is still much uncertainty concerning the role of the Arctic ecosystem in maintaining the balance of greenhouse gases in the Earth's atmosphere. The latter-day build-up of these gases may be not so much the result of man-made emissions, as a consequence of a shrinking ability of the Arctic environment to absorb and transform carbon dioxide and methane. The problem has to be immediately looked into, and it can only be sorted out cooperatively."


