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Scientists are
busy analysing data from the Catlin Arctic Survey. The data will provide
important new evidence for the crucial climate negotiations in Copenhagen this
December. The Catlin Arctic
Survey team returned this May with unique new measurements of the thickness and
extent of sea ice in the Arctic. The University of Cambridge’s Polar Oceans
Physics Group is currently analysing the data, with initial results already
suggesting that the sea ice is newer and thinner (and therefore more liable to melt)
than expected. The results will help climate scientists around the world to
understand how quickly the dwindling summer sea ice will melt and to predict
more accurately the effect this will have on the global climate. WWF are providing
funding to help the research team speed up their analysis. It’s crucial that
the results are available in time for the UN climate change summit in Copenhagen,
as they will strengthen WWF’s calls for a strong global climate deal.
Governments must take action urgently to keep global temperature rise below 2°C,
the threshold beyond which most scientists predict climate change could become
catastrophic.
“Climate change
is happening now and nowhere is it more evident than in the Arctic,” said WWF’s
head of climate change, Keith Allott.
“Sea ice is a
critical part of Earth’s climate system and the loss of sea ice in the Arctic
Ocean is happening decades ahead of most predictions. We cannot predict all of
the effects of this ice loss, but scientists foresee severe disruption to the
natural world on both a local and a global scale.”
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