White Arctic vs. Blue Arctic: A case study of diverging stakeholder responses to environmental change

Recent trends and climate models suggest that the Arctic summer sea ice cover is likely to be lost before climate interventions can stabilize it. There are environmental, socioeconomic, and sociocultural arguments for, but also against, restoring and sustaining current conditions. Even if global war...

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Veröffentlicht in:Earth's future 2016-08, Vol.4 (8), p.396-405
Hauptverfasser: Newton, Robert, Pfirman, Stephanie, Schlosser, Peter, Tremblay, Bruno, Murray, Maribeth, Pomerance, Rafe
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container_end_page 405
container_issue 8
container_start_page 396
container_title Earth's future
container_volume 4
creator Newton, Robert
Pfirman, Stephanie
Schlosser, Peter
Tremblay, Bruno
Murray, Maribeth
Pomerance, Rafe
description Recent trends and climate models suggest that the Arctic summer sea ice cover is likely to be lost before climate interventions can stabilize it. There are environmental, socioeconomic, and sociocultural arguments for, but also against, restoring and sustaining current conditions. Even if global warming can be reversed, some people will experience ice‐free summers before perennial sea ice begins to return. We ask: How will future generations feel about bringing sea ice back where they have not experienced it before? How will conflicted interests in ice‐covered vs. ice‐free conditions be resolved? What role will science play in these debates? Key Points The Arctic is likely to experience ice‐free summers for decades before warming can be reversed through mitigation or engineering solutions Diverse, often conflicting interests will emerge as ecological conditions, economies, and societies adapt to the new climate Development of options for adaptation or a return to perennial sea ice must account for these stakeholder conflicts
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subjects Arctic climate change
Arctic climate stakeholders
Arctic sea ice
Carbon
Carbon capture and sequestration
Climate change
Climate models
Climate science policy
Community
Emissions
Environmental changes
Environmental impact
Global warming
Greenhouse gases
Ice
Ice cover
Ice environments
Ice free Arctic summers
Melting
Observatories
Polar environments
Scientists
Sea ice
Socio-economic aspects
Stakeholder conflicts and climate change
Stakeholders
Summer
title White Arctic vs. Blue Arctic: A case study of diverging stakeholder responses to environmental change
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