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BumRushDaShow

(144,203 posts)
Tue Dec 10, 2024, 08:48 PM Dec 10

The state of the Arctic: High temperatures, melting ice, fires and unprecedented emissions

Source: NBC News

Dec. 10, 2024, 11:00 AM EST


The Arctic just experienced its second-hottest year on record. And concerningly, the region’s tundra has transitioned from being a sink for carbon to a source of emissions as permafrost melts to release methane. That will only amplify the amount of heat-trapping gases that enter the atmosphere, paving the way for further warming.

The findings, shared Tuesday in the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Arctic report card, show how climate change is scrambling ecosystems and shape-shifting the landscape in the part of the planet where global warming is most intense.

Considered a bellwether region for the effects of climate change, the Arctic is heating up far faster than places at lower altitudes — two to four times as quickly, depending on the baselines scientists use for comparison and which geography they include in assessments. The last nine years in the Arctic have all had the highest average temperatures recorded since 1900. That dynamic is the result of a phenomenon called Arctic amplification. As the Arctic loses snow cover and sea ice, more dark-colored ocean water and rock emerge.

Those dark surfaces reflect less radiation back to space, absorbing heat, instead. In addition, patterns of circulation in the oceans and the atmosphere are increasingly transporting heat toward the Earth’s poles. Together, that means the Arctic is a fundamentally different place from what it was just 10 years ago, said the lead editor of the new NOAA report, Twila Moon, deputy lead scientist and science communication liaison at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Read more: https://www.nbcnews.com/science/climate-change/arctic-ice-melting-high-temperatures-fires-emissions-rcna183464



Link to NOAA Arctic REPORT CARD - Arctic Report Card: Update for 2024


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The state of the Arctic: High temperatures, melting ice, fires and unprecedented emissions (Original Post) BumRushDaShow Dec 10 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Dec 10 #1
There's the future. nocoincidences Dec 10 #2
I think I have read somewhere that some places in the Arctic are seeing weather that was not thought possible. tornado34jh Dec 10 #3
Scary shit flying_wahini Dec 10 #4
fiddling while the world burns. nt Javaman Dec 11 #5

Response to BumRushDaShow (Original post)

tornado34jh

(1,311 posts)
3. I think I have read somewhere that some places in the Arctic are seeing weather that was not thought possible.
Tue Dec 10, 2024, 10:52 PM
Dec 10

Just last summer, Alaska, not known for thunderstorms, had 75,000 lightning strikes in a 24 hour period. There also has been thunderstorms as far north as 85 degrees North. That wasn't thought possible, but now we are seeing that more often. Longyearbyen, which is in the Svalbard of Islands around 78-79 degrees North in 2020 had a record high temperature of 71.1 F. so it's happening more frequently than we would like to admit.

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