Permafrost thaw does not only have global effects. Locally throughout the Arctic it has caused roads, bridges, homes and other structures built in frozen ground to become unstable and unusable. Melting permafrost has also resulted in greater erosion, leading to land collapse and flooding.
The project will address those issues in coordination with some Alaska Native communities, said Robin Bronen, a human rights lawyer and executive director of Alaska Institute for Justice, based in Anchorage. A few coastal communities in the state have been trying to relocate for years.
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Deadly combination. Global warming is greatly increasing the risk that extreme wildfires in the American West will be followed by heavy rainfall, a new study has found, highlighting the need to be prepared for mudslides and flash floods after the flames from severe blazes are out.
Ice shelf collapses. For the first time since satellites began observing Antarctica nearly half a century ago, an ice shelf has collapsed on the eastern part of the continent. The 450-square-mile ice shelf was located in an area known as Wilkes Land; the loss occurred in mid-March.
The project will work to develop a governance framework for relocation, she said, “to create a process where communities have the environmental data they need, based on their Indigenous knowledge and the science, to make these decisions about whether or not they can stay where they are.”
Dr. Natali said permafrost thaw is already underway and people are being impacted by it. “People are moving their houses or having to raise their houses up to deal with this,” she said. “And there’s no support for it.”
The project is being funded through the Audacious Project, a collaborative funding group that is an offshoot of TED, the idea-sharing organization.
“It’s a lot of money,” Dr. Holdren said, although perhaps not as much as some think because the $41 million is spread over six years. “And we’re going to be able, I think, to do a lot of good with it.”