Climate crisis: alarm at record-breaking heatwave
in Siberia
Unusually high temperatures in region linked to
wildfires, oil spill and moth swarms
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
@dpcarrington
Published
onWed 17 Jun 2020 16.49 BST
A prolonged
heatwave in Siberia is “undoubtedly alarming”, climate scientists have said.
The freak temperatures have been linked to wildfires, a huge oil spill and a
plague of tree-eating moths.
On a global
scale, the Siberian heat is helping push the world towards its hottest year on
record in 2020, despite a temporary dip in carbon emissions owing to the
coronavirus pandemic.
Temperatures
in the polar regions are rising fastest because ocean currents carry heat
towards the poles and reflective ice and snow is melting away.
Russian
towns in the Arctic circle have recorded extraordinary temperatures, with
Nizhnyaya Pesha hitting 30C on 9 June and Khatanga, which usually has daytime
temperatures of around 0C at this time of year, hitting 25C on 22 May. The
previous record was 12C.
In May,
surface temperatures in parts of Siberia were up to 10C above average,
according to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S). Martin Stendel,
of the Danish Meteorological Institute, said the abnormal May temperatures seen
in north-west Siberia would be likely to happen just once in 100,000 years
without human-caused global heating.
Freja
Vamborg, a senior scientist at C3S, said: “It is undoubtedly an alarming sign,
but not only May was unusually warm in Siberia. The whole of winter and spring
had repeated periods of higher-than-average surface air temperatures.
“Although
the planet as a whole is warming, this isn’t happening evenly. Western Siberia
stands out as a region that shows more of a warming trend with higher
variations in temperature. So to some extent large temperature anomalies are
not unexpected. However, what is unusual is how long the warmer-than-average
anomalies have persisted for.”
Marina
Makarova, the chief meteorologist at Russia’s Rosgidromet weather service,
said: “This winter was the hottest in Siberia since records began 130 years
ago. Average temperatures were up to 6C higher than the seasonal norms.”
Robert
Rohde, the lead scientist at the Berkeley Earth project, said Russia as a whole
had experienced record high temperatures in 2020, with the average from January
to May 5.3C above the 1951-1980 average. “[This is a] new record by a massive
1.9C,” he said.
In
December, Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, commented on the unusual heat:
“Some of our cities were built north of the Arctic Circle, on the permafrost.
If it begins to thaw, you can imagine what consequences it would have. It’s
very serious.”
Thawing
permafrost was at least partly to blame for a spill of diesel fuel in Siberia
this month that led Putin to declare a state of emergency. The supports of the
storage tank suddenly sank, according to its operators; green groups said
ageing and poorly maintained infrastructure was also to blame.
Wildfires
have raged across hundreds of thousands of hectares of Siberia’s forests.
Farmers often light fires in the spring to clear vegetation, and a combination
of high temperatures and strong winds has caused some fires to burn out of
control.
Swarms of
the Siberian silk moth, whose larvae eat at conifer trees, have grown rapidly
in the rising temperatures. “In all my long career, I’ve never seen moths so
huge and growing so quickly,” Vladimir Soldatov, a moth expert, told AFP.
He warned
of “tragic consequences” for forests, with the larvae stripping trees of their
needles and making them more susceptible to fires.

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