WWF CLIMATE WITNESS: KENJI ITO, JAPAN

Environmental Panorama
International
April of 2007

 

16 Apr 2007 - My name is Kenji Ito and I have been a nature photographer for more than 20 years. I am fascinated by the beautiful mountains and sea of Hokkaido here on the northern island of Japan.

I was born and raised in Saitama, a metropolitan area in the middle of Honshu Island, but after spending my student life in Hokkaido I decided to stay. Since then I have been a nature photographer. I am especially attracted to the winter scenes of Hokkaido. However, in recent years I have seen a lot of changes in the environment of Hokkaido, making it harder to capture such winter scenes.

More rain, less snow

I used to enjoy skiing from the end of November in 11000s when I was a student in Hokkaido. But in recent years I have been unable to go skiing because we are getting more and more rain instead of snow.

The surroundings of Iwamizawa, the city where I live, used to be known as the area with the second heaviest snowfall in Hokkaido, but now it is getting less and less snow. In normal winters you would be finding residents shovelling snow everyday from the end of December to February. However, for the past five years, this is no longer necessary, especially in the winter of 2006-07 when it was so warm that I had to shovel the snow in my neighborhood only three times.

People in Iwamizawa are happy that they are free from the heavy work of shovelling snow, but at the same time they are worried that the snowfall is decreasing so rapidly. The famous snow festival in Sapporo suffered from a severe lack of snow in the winter of 2006-07. The organizers had to actually bring in snow from outside the town.

Photographing winter with less snow

One of the things that has fascinated me most on Hokkaido has been its beautiful winter scenery. For more than 15 years, during winter, I was always able to take photos of magnificent snowy mountains and floating sea ice.

Unfortunately, in recent years, there have been fewer opportunities to take pictures of such amazing scenery. I now have to wait until February to photograph winter images. Even then it is difficult to take good pictures of the mountains because winter temperatures do not drop low enough (such as -13 to -15°C as in previous years).

I believe these changes are due to global warming.

Because of the warmer weather the mountain snow becomes wet snow instead of dry snow. Wet snow is troublesome for me because it easily melts. Because of the changes in the snow conditions I need to stay in the mountains for at least a few weeks in order to take good winter pictures. This makes my job much more difficult. I used to be able to spend the night in the mountains by making a bivouac, a kind of hut in the heavy snow. But because there is less snow, and the snow has become wetter, this is sometimes impossible. It is becoming more and more difficult to stay longer in the mountains in winter.

Less sea ice drifts

Every winter, sea ice drifts from the Arctic region towards Hokkaido. However, I find that the extent of drifting sea ice around the Hokkaido area is decreasing every year. Even if it comes, it does not cover the entire sea as it used to do, and in the last couple of years I could see the sea water between the sheets of drift ice, which was impossible a few years ago. in the winter of 2006-07 I did not manage to take one single picture of the winter sea completely covered by drifting ice. Yes, we did get some drifing sea ice, but much less than before.

When the sea is completely covered by drifting sea ice it affects the local weather. When this happens, we are getting more continental weather rather than island weather. But when the sea is not covered entirely by ice, as is more often the case in recent years, we have more fog and mist, which is more like the weather we have in spring. These winters without heavy snow, with more rain and more fog are making me feel that the weather in Hokkaido is changing rapidly.

I would not be surprised if my photos of the ‘old’ snowy landscapes around Hokkaido will soon be regarded as a documentary, to show people how Hokkaido’s winters looked like several years ago.

Scientific background
The Japanese Meteorological Agency reports that the snow in the Hokkaido area dropped sharply from the mid-1980s by one-fourth, due to rising temperatures and more rain. The agency also released a report about the changes in the extent and duration of drift sea ice between 1970 and 2006. According to this report, the extent and duration of drifting sea ice is affected both by temperature and by wind. Although it is unclear which of these are the more dominant factors, the report confirmed that the duration of drifting sea ice has decreased and that the extent has decreased by 4.4% each year during the last 35 years.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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