Russia: Analysis From Washington -- Another Threat In The Arctic
By Paul Goble

Washington, 13 February 2001 (RFE/RL) -- A United Nations scientist said last 
week that global warming is destroying the permafrost layer in the Arctic, 
causing the tundra there to release greenhouse gases far more quickly than 
expected, threatening both industrial exploitation of the region and the 
lives of the indigenous peoples. 

Svein Tveidtal, a senior scientist of the UN Environmental Program, said that 
global warming is already causing "tremendous problems" in the Arctic and is 
likely to cause even more in the future. Rising temperatures there, he said, 
are causing the melting of the permafrost layer that has absorbed carbon 
dioxide in the past but now is releasing the kind of greenhouse gases that 
threaten the ozone layer.

And the release of such gases, Tveidtal said, then leads to even less 
retention of carbon dioxide in the Arctic, a thinner ozone shield in the 
upper atmosphere, and still more warming, a pattern that threatens to become 
an ever more vicious cycle in the first instance for the peoples of the high 
Arctic and then for the world community as a whole.

Because the destruction of the permafrost layer is likely to lead to a 
reduction in reindeer populations, Tveidtal said, the indigenous peoples are 
likely to find their traditional way of life under threat. The Russian 
Federation alone has some 200,000 such people, and there are also significant 
communities in Canada, Alaska, and Greenland.

Moreover, the thawing of the permafrost layer will threaten construction of 
buildings, pipelines, and other infrastructure erected there by outsiders 
seeking to exploit the region's enormous mineral reserves. Indeed, Tveidtal 
suggested, the loss of the permafrost layer may make it almost impossible to 
recover these reserves at current levels of technology.

And finally, what is happening with the Arctic's permafrost will have a 
spreading impact on the rest of the world not only because it will contribute 
to the destruction of the ozone layer but also because it may mean that the 
process of global warming -- over which there continue to be so many debates 
-- may proceed far more quickly than anyone had thought up to now.

For most of the last several hundred years during which outsiders have 
ventured into the Arctic, most of them have adopted an almost contemptuous 
attitude toward both the tundra and the people living there. Indeed, some 
observers have suggested that tundra is one of the few things almost anything 
will improve. And governments often have been unwilling to protect local 
people when money can be made from extractive industries. 

Many of the indigenous communities have seen their populations dwindle 
through disease, alcoholism, and the destruction of their traditional way of 
life, and, with only a few exceptions -- Canada being the most noteworthy -- 
the governments have done relatively little to protect these communities. 
Indeed, the attitude of many in these countries toward the northern peoples 
has been one of "adapt or die."

And these attitudes have only increased as more and more natural resources -- 
particularly oil -- are discovered in the region. Pressed by the more 
numerous populations in the lower latitudes, governments with Arctic 
populations have often taken the view that the economic needs of the majority 
should outweigh even the survival of traditional groups.

But the United Nations Environment Program's warning suggests that there are 
now additional reasons for these governments and indeed the international 
community to revisit the issue and to recognize that the processes of global 
warming may now be threatening populations in the temperate climatic regions 
both directly and even more through the impact of such warming on the Arctic 
region itself.

Only one wire service carried this story last week, an indication of the 
general neglect this issue has experienced up to now. But the problems that 
the story reported suggest that the melting of the permafrost may soon become 
an issue that no journalistic outlet and no government will be able to avoid.


_______________________________________________
CrashList website: http://website.lineone.net/~resource_base

Reply via email to