Iceland review - 2016, Side 45

Iceland review - 2016, Side 45
ICELAND REVIEW 43 ICELAND REVIEW 43 No country can be exempt from the effects of climate change. It’s a global problem, so it really demands a global solution,” asserts Hugi Ólafsson, director of the Department of Oceans, Water and Climate at Iceland’s Ministry for the Environment and Natural Resources. “Iceland produces about 0.01 percent of global emissions and unilateral action by us does not matter much—and that is also true for bigger countries. For us to take any meaningful action we need this global foundation.” I meet Hugi in Reykjavík in mid-January, a few weeks after he returned from the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP21, the 21st yearly meeting of the Conference of the Parties) in Paris, where he represented Iceland as the country’s chief climate negotiator. Adopted by all 195 of the participating member states and the European Union (EU), the agreement, which will govern greenhouse emission meas- ures from 2020, is considered a major milestone in climate negotiations. Hugi is clearly pleased with the result. “I was very happy. People were pretty adamant that we probably wouldn’t get many other chances to get a truly global agreement but still I would say that the agreement exceeded my expectations. I have been to 11 of these COP meetings and I have never encountered such a positive atmosphere and businesslike atti- tude—and there was genuine joy at the end,” he states. OCEANS OF CHANGE The impacts of climate change in Iceland are being seen in the country’s glaciers. Due to warming temperatures, they have retreated by, on average, one meter per year—and there are more extreme examples. According to the Glacier Research Society of Iceland, Sólheimajökull glacial tongue, a popular tourist destination in the south of the country, has retreated roughly 900 meters since 1995. “The most visible indications of climate change are glaciers,” Hugi affirms, adding: “We have very good historical records of monitoring them and they are pretty much all receding. There may be some partial reversals but scientists warn us that if this trend con- tinues, they will disappear in one to two centuries.” One of the consequences of this will be a change to the water cycle. Glaciers are important water reservoirs and regulators, and most would find it strange to live in a land called Iceland if it were largely devoid of ice, Hugi points out, adding that the disappear- ance of Iceland’s glaciers would also signal that global warming had probably reached dangerous lev- els for Icelanders and human- kind in general. Even if Iceland were able to deal with disappearing glaciers with- out suffering negative consequences for the econ- omy and social welfare, Hugi stresses that it would be wrong to make light of such a profound change in nature. Extensive research on glaciers in Iceland is ongoing. “We want to make the glaciers accessible, like a real life classroom on climate change, both for Icelanders and visitors. We collect pictures and data so we can use glaciers as visible indicators of the changes—changes we can literally see.” Aside from higher temperatures and a changing landscape,
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