6 July, 2001
Hydrocarbon Impacts Database / Arctic Climate Change Impact
The Hydrocarbon Impacts (HI) database has recently been made available on
the Web at: http://www.aina.ucalgary.ca/hi
The HI database contains over 4000 records describing publications and
research projects about the environmental impacts, socio-economic effects
and regulation of oil and gas exploration, development and transportation
in northern Canada. A Key Publications page provides an overview of
significant environmental, socio-economic and regulatory publications,
including a chronology of past development proposals and a list of
publications that contain useful background information.
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada funded the creation of HI, which is a
subset of the Arctic Institute of North America's Arctic Science and
Technology Information System (ASTIS). Your comments and suggestions would
be appreciated.
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CLIMATE CHANGE AFFECTING EVEN REMOTE ARCTIC ENVIRONMENT, STUDY SAYS
The remoteness of one of the world's largest ecosystems has not made it
immune from global environmental problems, according to a major new report
on the state of Arctic biodiversity, funded in part by the National Science
Foundation (NSF).
"Arctic Flora and Fauna: Status and Conservation" was released today in
Finland by the Arctic Council's working group for the Conservation of
Arctic Flora and Fauna (CAFF). The report includes contributions from more
than 150 specialists and experts throughout the Arctic.
"Many scientists or groups of specialists have looked at parts of the
Arctic or at different species, but until now no one has taken a
comprehensive look at the state of the entire Arctic," said Sune Sohlberg
of Sweden, who chairs the CAFF working group. "Thanks to this report, we
now have a better idea of conservation needs around the circumpolar region."
At the local level, the report argues, there is clear evidence that several
economically-important species have been exploited, and habitat has been
fragmented due to development activities.
It adds that climate change is already having measurable effects on Arctic
species, permafrost, and sea ice; alien invasive species are increasingly
penetrating the region; and contaminants released thousands of kilometers
away are appearing at high levels in human and wildlife communities.
The report also highlights the lack of critical information in many areas.
Population figures for plants and animals may be uncertain, and the
scientific understanding of the ways the Arctic ecosystem functions in
changing environment is incomplete. However, these population figures
provide a baseline for later research and monitoring data.
The report was developed over a two-year period and funded in part by a
$56,000 grant from NSF's division of environmental biology.
Based on the latest scientific information, the book-length report provides
a clear understanding of the importance of the Earth's largest eco-region
and its status in a rapidly changing world.
Henry Huntington, the lead U.S. researcher and chief writer on the
editorial team, called it "more a starting point than a final report."
He added, "finding and compiling data on species populations and other
basic parameters was harder than we had expected. I hope the Arctic
Council will build on our work, both through further research that takes a
circumpolar perspective and through actions that respond to the threats
identified in the report."
Using plain language and numerous maps, diagrams and photographs, the
report is designed to be accessible to both scientists and non-scientists.
By bringing together local and regional information, it paints a
circumpolar picture of the status and trends in Arctic flora and fauna,
including information on population sizes and changes, and a list of
globally threatened species in the Arctic.
The report was compiled by an international editorial team under the
direction of Paula Kankaanpää of the Finnish Ministry of Environment and
the Arctic Centre of the University of Lapland in Rovaniemi. Funding for
preparing and publishing the report came from a variety of sources around
the Arctic, including NSF and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Following presentation of the report to the Arctic Council's senior arctic
officials today, CAFF will develop specific recommendations for action,
which are expected to be delivered to the Arctic Council's next ministerial
meeting in fall 2002. These recommendations will likely chart the course
of CAFF's work for the next several years, and are expected to be used by
other organizations interested in Arctic conservation.
The Arctic Council is an intergovenmnetal forum that provides a mechanism
to address common concerns and challenges faced by the Arctic governments
and the people of the Arctic. It was established in 1996 in Ottawa, Canada.
Council members are Canada, Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, the Russian
Federation, Sweden, and the United States of America. The Association of
Indigenous Minorities of the North, Siberia and the Far East of the Russian
Federation, the Inuit Circumpolar Conference, the Saami Council, the
Aleutian International Association, Arctic Athabaskan Council and Gwich'in
Council International are Permanent Parcticipants in the Council.
-NSF-
For more information about the Arctic Council, see:
http://www.arctic-council.org/
For more information on the Arctic Council's Program for the Conservation
of Arctic Flora and Fauna, see: http://www.grida.no/caff/
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