Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 3EN, UK.
Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB2 3EN, UK.
Ambio. 2024 Aug;53(8):1246-1250. doi: 10.1007/s13280-024-02038-z. Epub 2024 Jun 1.
Polar regions are critically implicated in our understanding of global climate change. This is particularly the case for the Arctic, where positive feedback loops and climate tipping points enhance complexity and urgency. Half of the Arctic and much of the world's permafrost zone lie within Russian territory. Heightened geopolitical tensions, however, have severely damaged scientific collaboration between Russia and previously well established academic partners in western countries. Isolation is now causing increasingly large data gaps in arctic research that affect our ability to make accurate predictions of the impact of climate change on natural and societal systems at all scales from local to global. Here, we argue that options to resume both practical knowledge of collaborative working and flows of research data from Russia for global arctic science must continue to be asserted, despite an increasing tendency for the Arctic to become disconnected. Time is short, as preparations for the fifth International Polar Year begin to gather momentum. While sanctions remain in place, efforts to foster peer to peer connections and re-activate effective institutional cooperation are vital to address the grand challenges of global climate change.
极地在我们对全球气候变化的理解中起着至关重要的作用。特别是在北极地区,正反馈循环和气候临界点增强了其复杂性和紧迫性。北极地区的一半和世界上大部分的永久冻土层都位于俄罗斯境内。然而,地缘政治紧张局势的加剧严重破坏了俄罗斯与西方国家之前建立的学术合作伙伴之间的科学合作。现在的隔离导致北极研究中出现越来越大的数据空白,影响了我们准确预测气候变化对从地方到全球各个尺度的自然和社会系统的影响的能力。在这里,我们认为,尽管北极地区越来越孤立,但必须继续强调恢复俄罗斯在全球北极科学方面的合作实践知识和研究数据流动的选择,时间紧迫,因为第五次国际极地年的准备工作正在加紧进行。虽然制裁仍然存在,但必须努力促进同行之间的联系,并重新建立有效的机构合作,以应对全球气候变化的重大挑战。