Global Outlook for Ice and Snow,
compiled by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and a
network of about 70 world experts, and launched today in
Tromso, Norway. The report “underlines that the fate of
the world’s snowy and icy plates in a climatically
challenged world should be cause for concern in every
ministry, boardroom and living room across the world,”
said UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner.
“Indeed the
findings are as relevant to people living in the tropics and
temperate climes – and in cities from Berlin to Brasilia
and Beijing to Boston – as they are for the people living
in Arctic or in ice-capped mountain regions.”
Melting
snow and glaciers on the mountains of Asia alone could
affect approximately 40 per cent of the planet’s
population, the report noted.
Additionally, as ice and
snow melt, avalanches and floods from the build-up of
potentially unstable glacial lakes are possible. As ice
thaws, there is also the danger of higher levels of methane,
a gas which contributes to global warming, being released.
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Rising temperatures, coupled with the thawing of frozen
land or “permafrost,” are leading to the creation of new
and expansion of existing lakes in places such as Siberia
which are releasing bubbles of methane, estimated to be
43,000 years old.
Meanwhile, less snow and sea ice means
that more of the sun’s heat will be absorbed by land and
polar oceans, which in turn will speed up global warming.
This year’s slogan for World
Environment Day is “Melting Ice – a Hot Topic” in
support of International Polar Year, which runs from 2007 to
2008.
In a separate report released today in Tromso, UNEP
said that polar tourism has surged in the past decade,
potentially promoting environmental degradation in the
regions, especially in the Arctic.
In Antarctica, the
number of tourists visiting by land has soared 757 per cent
in the past decade and those arriving by sea by 430 per cent
in the past 14 years. In the Arctic, the number of tourists
has increased from one million in the early 1990s to 1.5
million today.
However, effective management practices
and implementation of infrastructure have not matched the
challenge posed by these rising numbers of tourists.
Produced in conjunction with the International Ecotourism
Society, the report called for relevant sustainable tourism
policies to be adopted urgently.
Polar regions, “once
the preserve of local indigenous communities and scientists,
are now very much on the fashionable tourist map and cruise
line schedules,” Mr. Steiner said, adding that “tourism
is an activity that if sustainably managed and with profits
and revenues fairly shared can contribute to the
conservation of the polar environment asᾠwell as the
well-being and livelihoods of local communities in the
Arctic, he said.
Stefanos Fotiou, head of UNEP’s
tourism unit and also coordinator of the report, called for
more practical tools to be devised to help communities
develop sustainable polar tourism policies and
programmes.”
The main celebrations for this year’s
Day will be held in Tromso, which hosts a centre for polar
research. South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu will lead an
ecumenical service in the Arctic Cathedral, and Crown Prince
Haakon of Norway will present the winners of a UNEP’s
children’s painting competition on the
environment.
ENDS
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