Permafrost thaw could threaten half of Arctic infrastructure

A new study shows that warming global temperatures are transforming the Arctic regions, where thawing permafrost and peat fires threaten up to half of the existing infrastructure by 2050.

arctic permafrost
An aerial view of the Arctic permafrost. Its thawing could lead to a release of toxic mercury to ocean food webs. Image: Brocken Inaglory, CC BY-SA 3.0

A new study has shown that warming global temperatures are transforming the Arctic regions, where thawing permafrost and peat fires threaten up to half of the existing infrastructure by 2050, leading to damages worth tens of billions of dollars. 

“Infrastructure is in trouble,” co-author Dmitry Streletskiy, a geographer at George Washington University, told Reuters. “But it is not like an earthquake. It is a relatively slow process, which gives us enough time to prevent some of the damage.”

The study reviewed two decades of research and found that the world’s permafrost — land that stays frozen all year round — has warmed at an average rate of 0.3° to 1.0°C per decade since the 1980s. In some areas of the High Arctic, the total increase has exceeded 3°C over four decades. The thawing ground is already starting to damage roads and buildings as it shifts and buckles, and scientists expect further impacts as climate change continues to raise temperatures.

According to Reuters, satellite imagery revealed that an estimated 120,000 buildings, 40,000 kilometres of roads, and 9,500 kilometres of pipelines could be at risk, with threats to some Canadian highways, the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, and some Russian cities. 

Other side effects of climate change are compounding the effects of higher temperatures. The warmer atmosphere has doubled the number of lightning storms in Arctic areas, sparking fires on peatlands. Once the fires burn off the insulative vegetative layer, the ground is exposed and it thaws faster. Both the burning organic matter and melting soil release more carbon and methane into the atmosphere to contribute to the greenhouse effect. Wired reported that the rapidly warming ground also creates vast sinkholes — up to 30 metres wide and three metres deep — in a process called thermokarst.

“It is really an upending of a system,” said Mark Lara of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. “It is pretty crazy how fast things are changing.”

People are still building in the Arctic despite these threats. Satellite images showed that coastal infrastructure has increased by 15 per cent, or 180 square kilometres, since 2000, reported Reuters, citing a different study. 

Streletskiy’s report noted that there are engineering solutions that can cool permafrost and stabilize infrastructure, but these are often expensive. It called for additional research to better understand the regions at highest risk.

This story was published with permission from The Energy Mix.

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