![]() |
|
|
|
![]() |
|
Many industrial structures, like this mining equipment on Baffin Island, may collapse as the supporting permafrost thaws. |
When permafrost melts, the soil loses its supporting network of ice crystals. This causes the ground above to collapse, setting off slumps and landslides which can destabilize buildings, roads and other infrastructure. Although much of the arctic is sparsely inhabited, there are large mines, oilfields, pipelines, airstrips and - in Russia - a nuclear power station, all resting on permafrost. Most of these structures, designed after the 1940s, were engineered to rely on the stability of the permafrost beneath. As the ground shifts, they can collapse, spilling hazardous chemicals into the environment and sometimes threatening human lives.
Permafrost will continue to melt slowly over centuries as the arctic warms, retreating closer and closer to the pole. Unfortunately, its retreat could also generate billions of tonnes of additional greenhouse gases.
![]() |
|
This frozen landscape could become a huge source of methane, accelerating climate change. |
Snowballing effects
Permafrost and sea ice both have cooling effects on the climate. Because sea ice is white, it reflects light away from the earth's surface, keeping it cool. Less sea ice means more heat will be absorbed by the ocean, which further prevents sea ice formation and exacerbates climate change.
Meanwhile, permafrost serves as an enormous 'freezer' filled with undecayed plant matter, one of the largest carbon reservoirs on earth. As permafrost melts, that plant matter starts to rot, releasing huge quantities of methane - a greenhouse gas 21 times more potent that carbon dioxide. Many permafrost zones contain enough plant matter to keep generating methane for centuries, once warming begins.
Collapsing Ice Sheets
Back to Global Meltdown
![]() |
|
|
|
|
![]() |