MELTING ARCTIC SEA-ICE MAKES TREACHEROUS
NORTH-EAST PASSAGE TRANSIT A BREEZE


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2009


Posted on 26 June 2009 - In an attempt to highlight rapidly melting summer sea-ice in the Arctic, an expedition will attempt to sail through the Northeast Passage of the Russian Arctic in a single summer, a trip that took over two years to complete when first attempted in 1839.

The expedition, led by the Swedish/Norwegian polar explorer Ola Skinnarmo will receive assistance from WWF in documenting the incredible pace of change in the region.

“The Arctic is melting fast. The summer sea ice extent has decreased by 40 percent since the 70s and may be completely gone within a generation,” says Neil Hamilton, director for the WWF International’s Arctic Programme.

“WWF supports the expedition to document the state of the environment and highlight impacts of climate change on the arctic ecosystems, and importantly to communicate the need for urgent action to address greenhouse gas emissions at the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen in December.”

Hamilton will join the first half of the expedition, while WWF’s polar bear coordinator Geoff York will participate in the latter half.

The famous Swedish/Finnish explorer Nordenskiöld first completed the voyage some 130 years ago, as he voyaged from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean through the North-East Passage.

At that time his ship was stuck in the ice for 10 months, but due to climate change, it is now possible to challenge the passage in one summer in a sailboat, without the support of an icebreaker.

“The arctic marine ecosystem depends on the ice for its survival. Polar bears need the ice to be able to hunt their primary food, seals. The seals in turn need the ice to give birth to their pups and the ice supports their primary prey - Arctic cod,” says York.

“Decreasing sea ice in the Arctic will cause hardship throughout the arctic food web - including impacts to arctic peoples, destabilizing a system that is already sensitive due to the comparatively low number of species.”

Both Neil Hamilton and Geoff York will be blogging and documenting the trip through photos and film.

The sights of this little-visited part of the world will be made accessible through photographs and blogs sent directly from the boat.

+ More

Match or better Brown, WWF urges wealthy world

Posted on 26 June 2009 - Gland, Switzerland: WWF has welcomed fresh financial commitments on climate change from UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown as “having the potential to get some movement back into the negotiations”.

Recent climate talks in Bonn, Germany made little progress over deep divisions on who would be cutting emissions and by how much and where the funding for climate change mitigation and adaptation in developing countries would come from.

Announcements of inadequate carbon emissions cuts in Japan and proposals that would effectively see Russian emissions increase had also added to the gloom over the negotiations, which need to reach an adequate global agreement capable of avoiding unacceptable risks of catastrophic climate change at a UN conference in Copenhagen in December.

“WWF welcomes the UK’s manifesto for Copenhagen and in particular the significant boost to the level of actual finance being mentioned,” said Kim Carstensen, leader of the WWF global climate deal campaign. “We are getting towards the right magnitude of funds if not quite yet to the right amounts.

“It is especially good that a G8 nation is stepping up and trying to break the logjam on international finance. The challenge is now on other developed countries to step up at the forthcoming G8 meeting and show how they would match, or preferably better, Brown."

Carstensen said WWF was still waiting on the details but there was much to approve of in the Prime Minister’s speech, including the need for more developing country influence in governance structures and the inclusion of aviation and shipping.

“We do, however have some reservations on the extent of reliance on the carbon market as a source of funds, not least because this will only work with much, much tougher targets for emissions reductions for developed nations than are currently on the table,” Carstensen said.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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