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bronxiteforever

(10,652 posts)
Tue Jul 29, 2025, 10:58 AM Tuesday

Troubling scenes from an Arctic in full-tilt crisis

Grist
By Matt Simon
Senior Staff Writer
July 29, 2025

The Arctic island of Svalbard is so reliably frigid that humanity bet its future on the place. Since 2008, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault — set deep in frozen soil known as permafrost — has accepted nearly 1.4 million samples of more than 6,000 species of critical crops. But, the island is warming six to seven times faster than the rest of the planet, making even winters freakishly hot, at least by Arctic standards. Indeed, in 2017, an access tunnel to the vault flooded as permafrost melted, though the seeds weren’t impacted.

This February, a team of scientists was working on Svalbard when irony took hold. Drilling into the soil, they gathered samples of bacteria that proliferate when the ground thaws. These microbes munch on organic matter and burp methane, an extremely potent greenhouse gas and significant driver of global warming. Those emissions are potentially fueling a feedback loop in the Arctic: As more soil thaws, more methane is released, leading to more thawing and more methane, and on and on.

In some parts of Svalbard, though, the scientists didn’t need to drill. Air temperatures climbed above freezing for 14 of the 28 days of February, reaching 40 degrees Fahrenheit, when the average temperature at this time of year is 5 degrees. Snow vanished in places, leaving huge pools of water. “I brought my equipment to drill into frozen soil and then ended up sampling a lot of soil just with a spoon, like it was soft ice cream,” said Donato Giovannelli, a geomicrobiologist at the University of Naples Federico II and co-lead author of a paper describing the experience, published last week in the journal Nature Communications. “That was really pretty shocking.”…

The speed of transformation in the Arctic is shocking, even for stoic scientists. And as nations keep spewing greenhouse gases, the feedback loops of the far north are threatening to load the atmosphere with still more methane. “We call this the new Arctic — this is not something that is a one-off,” Giovannelli said. “And on the other side, we’ve probably been a bit too cautious with our warnings regarding the climate. It’s not something for the next generation. It’s something for our generation.”

More here
https://grist.org/climate/troubling-scenes-from-an-arctic-in-full-tilt-crisis/

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CrispyQ

(40,037 posts)
6. I agree.
Tue Jul 29, 2025, 12:42 PM
Tuesday

Our reaction to climate change gets likened to frogs in a pot but I agree it's going to be a cliff.

mjvpi

(1,730 posts)
4. The climate is Capitalism's legacy. As a system , it posses no conscience, hence requires extreme regulation.
Tue Jul 29, 2025, 12:19 PM
Tuesday

It makes me so angry when I hear the term Socialist used in a derogatory manner, as if Capitalism is fucking perfect. And I thought having to go through adolescence and high school was the worst thing that I’ve done to my kids. This world we’re leaving them is scary stuff.

Mysterian

(5,799 posts)
5. GW Bush: "We'll all be dead, anyway.
Tue Jul 29, 2025, 12:24 PM
Tuesday

Perfectly encapsulating the republican party's utter selfishness, stupidity and total lack of concern for future generations.

hay rick

(8,923 posts)
7. Quarterly profits meet cataclysmic global risk.
Tue Jul 29, 2025, 01:14 PM
Tuesday

After all the easy and not-so-easy options expire, the final option for reducing humanity's carbon footprint will be reducing the number of feet.

Martin Eden

(14,676 posts)
8. How different might all this have been if the Supreme Court had not intervened to put GW Bush in the White House?
Wed Jul 30, 2025, 09:21 AM
Wednesday

Instead of Al Gore in the 2000 election -- a leader in addressing climate change -- we got a warmongering Texas oil man. Then Trump in 2016 & 2024.

Preventing catastrophic climate change requires global cooperation among the major industrial economies, but every Republican president is a major blow to the effort.

Hell, Jimmy Carter wanted to cut back on fossil fuels in the late 70's, then we got 12 years of R's who always want deregulation for short term profits.

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