Alert, Nunavit, Canada, according to Google Maps. Click image to enlarge. The map makes it easier to see why if Alert has temperatures of 20 C, Greenland's ice is melting. |
The planet’s most northerly human settlement is in the midst of an “unprecedented” heatwave as parts of the Arctic endure one of their hottest summers on record.
Canada’s weather agency confirmed on Tuesday that temperatures in Alert, Nunavut, peaked at 21C at the weekend – far exceeding the July average for the area of around 5C.
Overnight temperatures on Sunday remained above 15C; again, well in excess of nighttime lows that usually hover around freezing in a settlement that lies less than 900km from the North Pole.
The previous temperature record for the town, of 20C, was set in 1956.
In a further alarm bell for the region, the mercury climbed above 20C for a second day on Monday – the first time Alert’s climate station has recorded two consecutive days of 20C-plus temperatures in its history.
Alert is the northernmost permanently inhabited place in the world – with a population numbering less than 100 – and is far to the north of the Arctic Circle.
David Phillips, Environment Canada’s chief climatologist, said the weather in the far north of Canada was “quite spectacular” and “unprecedented”.
He told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation: “It’s nothing that you would have ever seen.”
Armel Castellan, a meteorologist at the Canadian environment ministry, told AFP the extreme weather was “quite phenomenal”.
“It’s an absolute record, we’ve never seen that before,” he said.
Tyler Hamilton, a meteorologist at the Weather Network, said: “This is in fact the first time a temperature warmer than 20C has been measured north of 80° on the planet.”
Alert’s heatwave comes as nearby [it's not actually 'nearby', although it is adjacent to the Arctic] Alaska saw its own record temperatures earlier this month.
Anchorage, the state’s largest city, sweltered in 32C on 4 July – shattering the seasonal high of around 24C.
Other local records were set across southern Alaska and came after five weeks of above-average temperatures in the outlying US state.
Rick Thoman, a climate specialist at the University of Alaska, said at the time that exceptionally warm weather events would only become more frequent because of the loss of sea ice and warming in the Arctic Ocean.
“These kinds of extreme weather events become much more likely in a warming world,” he said.
“Surface temperatures are above normal everywhere around Alaska. The entire Gulf of Alaska, in the Bering Sea, in the Chukchi Sea south of the ice edge, exceptionally warm waters, warmest on record, and of course record-low sea ice extent for this time of year off the north and northwest coasts of the state.”
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