Scientists from US, China, India, and Japan to Attend Climate Change and Permafrost Thawing Conference in Yakutsk
Representatives of the scientific community of Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, China, India, Brazil, the United States, and Japan
will take part in the Climate Change and Permafrost Melting Research and
Training Conference, which will take place in Yakutsk on 22–24 March as part of
the events of Russia’s chairmanship of the Arctic Council in 2021–2023, which
are managed by the Roscongress Foundation.
“Around 500 people plan to take part
in the conference, with half of them attending in person. Russian scientists
from Moscow, St. Petersburg, the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District, Buryatia,
Kabardino-Balkaria, the Komi Republic, Chukotka, Karelia, the Krasnoyarsk
Territory, and the Murmansk, Tomsk, Novosibirsk, and Tyumen Regions will speak
at the event. In addition, scientists from Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia,
China, India, Brazil, the US, and Japan are expected to participate in the
events of the conference,” Andrey Fedotov, Permanent Representative of the
Russian President for the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) and First Deputy Chairman
of the Government of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), said during a press
conference dedicated to the upcoming event in Yakutsk.
Scientific cooperation is one of the
most rapidly developing and promising areas in both bilateral and multilateral
cooperation, said Nikolay Korchunov, Chair of the Arctic Senior Officials and
Ambassador-at-Large of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Russia attaches
great importance to intensifying cooperation in high latitudes with other
countries considering that mechanisms for multilateral cooperation in the
Arctic, including the Arctic Council, are expected to weaken, he said.
“The themes related to the climate,
poles, and permafrost degradation concern all states today. Climate change in
the Arctic dictates the future of the entire planet. This century, the Arctic
will warm up two to three times faster than the rest of the world. We must keep
in mind that permafrost contains a substantial amount of carbon that enters the
atmosphere during the degradation of the permafrost layer, which further
exacerbates global climate change,” Korchunov said.
Korchunov also noted that the new
version of the Fundamentals of the State Policy of the Russian Federation in
the Arctic for the period until 2035 contains a separate clause that requires
an assessment of the condition and degradation of permafrost for the integrated
socioeconomic development of Russia’s Arctic zone. Issues related to the state
of infrastructure in the Arctic in light of global warming are taking on
greater importance, Korchunov said.
“Permafrost thawing could cause
serious damage: the Russian Ministry of Natural Resources estimates that its
degradation causes 29% of losses in oil and gas production, as well as problems
in the construction of railways and highways. According to the Russian Academy
of Sciences and Lomonosov Moscow State University, the likely damage from
permafrost degradation by 2050 will be at least RUB 5 trillion,” said Maxim
Dankin, Director of the Department for the Development of Russia’s Arctic Zone and
the Implementation of Infrastructure Projects at the Ministry for the
Development of the Russian Far East and Arctic.
The Climate Change and Permafrost
Melting Research and Training Conference aims to find joint practical and
scientifically based solutions to adapt the economy to climate change. The main
part of the conference’s research and training agenda will be devoted to the
sustainability of natural and technical permafrost systems amidst climate
change, which experts will discuss, including in a popular science format. The
conference will be attended by Russian and foreign scientists, economists,
engineers, builders, and representatives of the public authorities.
The Climate Change and Permafrost
Melting Research and Training Conference will be held regularly once every two
years based on an agreement to be signed by the Russian Federal Service for
Hydrometeorology and Environmental Monitoring, the Russian Academy of Sciences,
North-Eastern Federal University, as well as the Government and the Academy of
Sciences of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). In addition, an Association of
Geocryology Experts will be set up as part of the event.
The conference events will be held
both in person and remotely. Studios will be organized for participants in
Moscow, Beijing, and Astana, and live broadcasts of meetings and sessions will
be available on the event page on the Russian chairmanship’s official website.
The conference is being organized by the Ministry for the Development of the
Russian Far East and Arctic together with the Government of the Republic of
Sakha (Yakutia) and North-Eastern
Federal University.
Environmental protection, including
issues related to climate change, is among the priorities of Russia’s
chairmanship of the Arctic Council in 2021–2023. Given the rapid climate change
in the Arctic, which includes, among other things, the degradation of
permafrost and the emission of gas hydrates, Russia believes the primary
challenges are to mitigate the negative consequences of climate change, ensure
people adapt their daily activities to these changes and enhance their
sustainability, preserve and restore the environment, use natural resources
sustainably, maintain the health of Arctic ecosystems, including the marine
environment, and preserve biodiversity, in particular as concerns migratory
bird species.