Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 21 – Global
warming is hitting Russia nearly twice as hard as the rest of the land areas of
the world, with average temperatures having risen in Russian 0.47 degrees
Celsius over the last 40 years compared to 0.29 degrees elsewhere; and it is
hitting the Russian North even harder, with temperatures there up 0.69 degrees
over that period.
These trends, reported by the UN’s
meteorological service, are forcing both the Russian government and the Russian
people to take notice, according to Vadim Shuvalov, the outspoken mayor of
Surgut in the Khanty-Mansiisk Autonomous District (gorod-812.ru/v-rossii-tepleet-slishkom-byistro-naselenie-budut-adaptirovat/).
At the end of last month, Shuvalov
says, the Russian government finally officially recognized that global warming
was happening, that Russia is suffering from that more than most other places,
and that the authorities must take steps now to help the Russian population
adapt to the changes that are coming as a result.
The government’s order No. 3183 confirming
the December 25 decision posted on its website on January 4 (government.ru/docs/38739/). It says
that Russia and Russians face numerous negative consequences from the rapid
warming, including forest fires, the melting of permafrost, and the need for
more electricity to power air conditioning in the summer.
But the government also says there
will be so positive consequences from warming, including a reduction of energy
costs in the winter, longer shipping seasons in the Arctic, and the ability to
develop northern regions for agriculture. The Russian government committed
itself to helping Russians adapt over the next two years.
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