Thawing Arctic Permafrost: One of the Five Largest Threats to the Environment

Permafrost peatlands in the Republic of Komi – Photo: Hans Joosten

Approximately 23 million square kilometres of the world’s northern regions are subject to permafrost – ground that remains at sub-zero temperatures all year round. These are mainly peat soils, which – if frozen – store about half of the carbon that is locked in soils worldwide. When they thaw due to the warming climate, the carbon is released into the atmosphere as greenhouse gases (carbon dioxide and methane). In recent decades, the southern boundaries of the permafrost regions have receded northwards by 30 to 80 km - a significant loss in coverage.

Thawing and dry (often drained) peatlands hold additional dangers: Peat fires, which can burn underground for months and are hard to extinguish, cause further emissions and pose a health risk to people living in large-scale regions. Mining, agriculture and growing infrastructure projects are another menace to permafrost, which also serves as living space for indigenous people.

Thawing permafrost is considered one of the tipping points in global warming. The report sees the Arctic permafrost and its peatlands already subject to rapid changes and calls for urgent protection, conservation and prudent management of permafrost peatlands.

Aside from detailed background information, the report offers a new circumpolar map on the distribution of permafrost and Arctic peatlands based on the Global Peatland Database of the Greifswald Mire Centre.  

 

Further information

The UNEP’s “Frontiers” reports address environmental threats that are of global importance and are yet to have been recognised and dealt with sufficiently. The report is published in six languages and made available to governments and environmental institutions all over the world.

UNEP report: Frontiers 2018/19: Emerging Issues of Environmental Concern

Chapter “Permafrost Peatlands:Losing Ground in a Warming World” p. 38–48

The Greifswald Mire Centre is a partnership between the University of Greifswald, the Michael Succow Foundation and the Institute of Sustainable Development of Landscapes of the Earth (German: Institut für Dauerhaft Umweltgerechte Entwicklung von Naturräumen der Erde, DUENE e.V.).

Global Peatland Database of the Greifswald Mire Centre

 

About the author

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Hans Joosten is peatland scientist and paleoecologist at the University of Greifswald’s Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology . He also is General Secretary of the International Mire Conservation Group (IMCG), the worldwide organisation of peatland conservationists, and co-founder of the Greifswald Mire Centre.

 

This photo may be downloaded and used for editorial purposes in context with this press information. Giving credit to its author is mandatory.  Download

 

Contact at the University of Greifswald

Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Hans Joosten
Institute of Botany and Landscape Ecology
Soldmannstraße 15, 17489 Greifswald
Tel.: +49 3834 420 4177
joostenuni-greifswaldde

 

Dr. Franziska Tanneberger
Tel.: +49 3834 420 4137
​​​​​​​tanneuni-greifswaldde


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