10 January 2007 - The good news is the polar bear is likely
to given extra protection under US law. The bad news is
its home is disappearing faster than ever. With 2007 predicted
to be the warmest year on record it looks like they'll need
all the protection they can get.
In December 2006 the US Fish and Wildlife Service officially
listed the polar bear as a 'threatened' species, due to
the meltdown of its sea-ice habitat caused by global warming.
Unfortunately it took a lawsuit by Greenpeace and the Natural
Resource Defense Council (NRDC) to force the US administration
to put the polar bear on the list and even now its listing
is a proposal so could take another year to be made official.
But the implications of the listing go far beyond just
the polar bear. Listing under the Endangered Species Act
will provide broad protection to polar bears, including
a requirement that US federal agencies ensure that any action
carried out, authorised, or funded by the US government
will not jeopardise the continued existence of polar bears,
or adversely modify their critical habitat.
"The United States has failed to lead the world in
tackling global warming. With under five percent of the
world's people, we generate more than 20 percent of the
global warming pollution," said Kert Davies, Greenpeace
research director. "We must start cutting greenhouse
gas emissions or the Polar Bear will be pushed to the brink
of extinction within our lifetime."
While the policy news for the polar bear was good, news
from the Arctic was distinctly bad. What used to be the
Ayles Ice Shelf has broken off from Ellesmere Island, Canada.
The shelf was the size of Manhattan.
Polar bears live only in the Arctic and are totally dependent
on the sea ice. A growing body of evidence shows that the
Arctic ice is vanishing much faster than previously expected.
The thick multiyear ice has been shrinking eight to 10 percent
per decade, with some climate models predicting that the
Arctic could be ice-free in summer as early as 2040. In
some polar regions, the sea ice season has shortened as
much as three weeks, and scientists have discovered that
the polar ice caps are melting at an alarming rate - losing
an area the size of Colorado - more than a million square
miles - in just the last year.
The polar bear and the melting of the Arctic are probably
the most charismatic and dramatic indicators of our changing
climate. It's going to take a lot more than the Endangered
Species Act to save the polar bear and stop dangerous global
warming.
While the talk about taking action to tackle global warming
increased in 2006, there was still too much talk and too
little action from world leaders.
Carbon up, temperature up
Carbon dioxide emissions, the biggest cause of global warming,
are now rising at more than 2 percent a year. The longer
measures to reduce carbon emissions are postponed the more
drastic those measures will need to be.
As surely as carbon emissions are rising so are global
temperatures. It has already been predicted by the UK Met
Office that 2007 is likely to be one of the warmest years
on record. This is partly due to El Nino and also due to
increasing carbon emissions.
What's needed in 2007 is action -- from governments, corporations,
but from all of us as well -- to cut carbon emissions and
slow rising temperatures.
Next time you leave a light burning unnecessarily, think
about the polar bears. The next time you buy a product,
look at its energy efficiency and think about the polar
bears. And next time a politician isn't crystal clear that
the planet has a problem that needs fixing, vote with your
paw.