The Arctic’s rapidly melting glaciers threaten the release of vast amounts of methane, mercury and other harmful substances into the atmosphere, the outcome of which could be devastating. Global warming is also moving far faster in the region than it is elsewhere in the world, though monitoring these changes is impossible without access to the climate observation stations where the necessary data is collected, many of which are in Russia.
Warming up
Temperatures in the Arctic have risen by one degree every decade for the past 40 years. One degree of warming melts 4 million square kilometres of permafrost, causing serious climate change due to the release of large amounts of carbon. Indeed, NASA estimates that the Arctic ice sheet has shrunk by an astonishing 12.6% over the past decade alone.