The China Mail - Warming climate upends Arctic mining town

USD -
AED 3.672501
AFN 65.496617
ALL 81.00005
AMD 376.846763
ANG 1.79008
AOA 916.999746
ARS 1404.011905
AUD 1.413308
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.698896
BAM 1.64226
BBD 2.013225
BDT 122.275216
BGN 1.67937
BHD 0.376971
BIF 2962.558673
BMD 1
BND 1.265482
BOB 6.907178
BRL 5.197301
BSD 0.999559
BTN 90.496883
BWP 13.113061
BYN 2.871549
BYR 19600
BZD 2.010286
CAD 1.355285
CDF 2209.999945
CHF 0.768705
CLF 0.02167
CLP 855.660136
CNY 6.91085
CNH 6.91352
COP 3665.47
CRC 494.655437
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 92.586917
CZK 20.395302
DJF 177.720247
DKK 6.28431
DOP 62.648518
DZD 129.421413
EGP 46.789601
ERN 15
ETB 155.350112
EUR 0.841135
FJD 2.1921
FKP 0.731721
GBP 0.73355
GEL 2.689858
GGP 0.731721
GHS 10.999761
GIP 0.731721
GMD 73.501055
GNF 8774.581423
GTQ 7.665406
GYD 209.121405
HKD 7.818025
HNL 26.502368
HRK 6.336902
HTG 131.114918
HUF 318.123017
IDR 16785
ILS 3.08274
IMP 0.731721
INR 90.58835
IQD 1310.5
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 121.979992
JEP 0.731721
JMD 156.391041
JOD 0.709029
JPY 154.430977
KES 128.840173
KGS 87.449783
KHR 4029.999526
KMF 414.398376
KPW 900.003053
KRW 1457.110076
KWD 0.30701
KYD 0.832959
KZT 491.773271
LAK 21474.999728
LBP 89702.217085
LKR 309.286401
LRD 186.625004
LSL 15.960319
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.301488
MAD 9.116985
MDL 16.91696
MGA 4435.999563
MKD 51.845871
MMK 2100.147418
MNT 3570.525201
MOP 8.048802
MRU 39.903383
MUR 45.679957
MVR 15.449743
MWK 1736.000021
MXN 17.19797
MYR 3.925015
MZN 63.899639
NAD 15.96025
NGN 1353.250247
NIO 36.720174
NOK 9.52164
NPR 144.79562
NZD 1.655235
OMR 0.384499
PAB 0.999551
PEN 3.357498
PGK 4.284982
PHP 58.506008
PKR 279.749909
PLN 3.54924
PYG 6578.947368
QAR 3.64125
RON 4.283496
RSD 98.691984
RUB 77.426347
RWF 1454
SAR 3.750835
SBD 8.058149
SCR 13.754362
SDG 601.499699
SEK 8.894501
SGD 1.265285
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.350055
SLL 20969.499267
SOS 571.490866
SRD 37.890229
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.9
SVC 8.746069
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 15.960193
THB 31.239955
TJS 9.380697
TMT 3.51
TND 2.846026
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.635195
TTD 6.779547
TWD 31.513796
TZS 2575.000281
UAH 43.048987
UGX 3553.510477
UYU 38.331227
UZS 12305.00008
VES 384.79041
VND 25885
VUV 119.800563
WST 2.713692
XAF 550.798542
XAG 0.012307
XAU 0.000198
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.801442
XDR 0.685017
XOF 550.500489
XPF 100.674983
YER 238.324995
ZAR 15.942335
ZMK 9001.186468
ZMW 19.016311
ZWL 321.999592
  • RYCEF

    0.5300

    17.41

    +3.04%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    24.08

    +0.46%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    58.82

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    0.3900

    97.24

    +0.4%

  • BTI

    -0.9600

    60.19

    -1.59%

  • CMSC

    0.1070

    23.692

    +0.45%

  • BCC

    0.7100

    89.73

    +0.79%

  • BCE

    0.2100

    25.83

    +0.81%

  • VOD

    -0.2300

    15.25

    -1.51%

  • RELX

    -0.1900

    29.29

    -0.65%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    88.76

    +0.42%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    12.78

    -0.23%

  • BP

    -2.2500

    36.97

    -6.09%

  • AZN

    5.3900

    193.4

    +2.79%

Warming climate upends Arctic mining town
Warming climate upends Arctic mining town / Photo: © AFP

Warming climate upends Arctic mining town

Tor Selnes owes his life to a lamp. He miraculously survived a fatal avalanche that shed light on the vulnerability of Svalbard, a region warming faster than anywhere else, to human-caused climate change.

Text size:

On the morning of December 19, 2015, the 54-year-old school monitor was napping at home in Longyearbyen, the main town in the Norwegian archipelago halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole.

Suddenly, a mass of snow hurtled down from Sukkertoppen, the mountain overlooking the town, taking with it two rows of houses.

Selnes' home was swept away 80 metres (263 feet). The room where he was sleeping was completely demolished amid "a scraping sound like metal against a road".

To avoid being buried under the snow, he grabbed onto a ceiling lamp.

"It's like I was in a washing machine, surrounded by planks, glass, sharp objects, everything you can imagine", recalls Selnes.

He survived, suffering just scrapes and bruises. His three children, who were in another part of the house, were unhurt.

But two neighbours -- Atle, with whom he played poker the night before, and Nikoline, a two-year-old girl -- lost their lives.

The accident, which had been unthinkable in locals' eyes, sent shockwaves through the small community of under 2,500 people.

"There's been a lot of talk of climate change ever since I came... but it was kind of difficult to take in or to see," author and journalist Line Nagell Ylvisaker, who has lived in Longyearbyen since 2005, tells AFP.

"When we live here every day, it's like seeing a child grow -- you don't see the glaciers retreat," she says.

- Eye-opener -

In Svalbard, climate change has meant shorter winters; temperatures that yo-yo; more frequent precipitation, increasingly in the form of rain; and thawing permafrost -- all conditions that increase the risk of avalanches and landslides.

In the days after the tragedy, unseasonal rains drenched the town. The following autumn, the region saw record rainfalls, and then a new avalanche swept away another house in 2017, this time with no victims.

"Before there was a lot of talk about polar bears, about new species, about what would happen to the nature around us" with climate change, Ylvisaker explains, adding: "The polar bear floating on an ice sheet is kind of the big symbol".

The string of extreme weather incidents "was really an eye-opener of how this will affect us humans as well".

After the two avalanches, authorities condemned 144 homes they considered at risk, or around 10 percent of the town's homes, and installed a massive, granite anti-avalanche barrier at the foot of Sukkertoppen.

It is an ironic turnaround for Longyearbyen, which owes its existence to fossil fuels.

The town was founded in 1906 by US businessman John Munro Longyear, who came to extract coal. It grew up around the mines in a jumble of brightly coloured wooden houses.

Almost all the mines are now closed, the last one due to shutter next year. An enormous sci-fi-like hangar of trolleys towers over the town, bearing witness to its past as a mining town.

Now it is human-caused climate change that is making its mark on the landscape here.

- Hot spot -

According to Ketil Isaksen, a researcher at the Norwegian Meteorological Institute, the Svalbard region is "the place on Earth where temperatures are rising the most".

In the northernmost part of the Barents Sea where the archipelago is located, temperatures are rising five to seven times faster than on the planet as a whole, according to a study he co-authored and recently published in scientific journal Nature.

Why? The shrinking sea ice, explain scientists. It normally acts as a layer of insulation preventing the sea from warming the atmosphere in winter and protecting the sea from the sun in summer.

In Longyearbyen, thawing permafrost means the soil is slumping. Lamp posts are tilting and building foundations need to be shored up because the ground is shifting. Gutters, once unnecessary in this cold and dry climate, have started appearing on roofs.

On the edge of town, people used to snowmobile across the now not-so-aptly named Isfjorden (Ice fjord), which hasn't frozen over since 2004.

Even the famed Global Seed Vault, designed to protect the planet's bio-diversity from man-made and natural disasters, has had to undergo major renovations after the entrance tunnel bored into a mountainside unexpectedly flooded.

At the offices of local newspaper Svalbardposten, chief editor Borre Haugli sums up the region's climate change: "We don't discuss it. We see it".

P.Deng--ThChM