While rain forests have long scored attention for their role in
trapping carbon, discussions concerning the Arctic have centered on
whether or not, or how much, we are going to allow companies to drill
for oil far up north.
Now, scientists are suggesting the Arctic
should have renewed focus for another reason: Climate change,
accelerated by the melting of permafrost and resulting greenhouse gas
emissions, could cost the global economy, in the long run, as much as
$43 trillion.
This analysis was published in the journal Nature Climate Change by
a joint group of scientists from the University of Colorado and the
University of Cambridge. In a letter, the study’s lead authors, Chris Hope and Kevin Schaefer, suggest that the Arctic region is warming at approximately twice the rate of the global average.
Why
is this a potential threat? Hope and Schaefer’s team posit that the
melting of permafrost, in addition to the loss of ice sheets in
Greenland and the far northern islands of Canada, will lead to the
release of countless billions of tons of not only carbon dioxide, but
also far more damaging methane gas. The release of additional greenhouse
gases into the atmosphere will cause a bevy of problems: Damage and
loss to real estate in coastal areas, the loss of crops due to higher
temperatures, decrease in electricity from hydropower, and increased use
of air conditioning are just a few examples of the hits to the global
economy. Those losses would far outweigh any economic benefits, such as
the opening of Arctic shipping routes, investment in low-carbon
transportation or economic development in the world’s far northern
regions.
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