Scientists stunned by rare Arctic lightning storms north of Alaska
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[July 17, 2021]
By Yereth Rosen
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) -
Meteorologists were stunned this week when three successive
thunderstorms swept across the icy Arctic from Siberia to north of
Alaska, unleashing lightning bolts in an unusual phenomenon that
scientists say will become less rare with global warming.
“Forecasters hadn’t seen anything like that before,” said Ed Plumb, a
National Weather Service meteorologist in Fairbanks, speaking about the
storms that started on Saturday.
Typically, the air over the Arctic Ocean, especially when the water is
covered with ice, lacks the convective heat needed to generate lightning
storms.
But as climate change warms the Arctic faster than the rest of the
world, that's changing, scientists say.
Episodes of summer lightning within the Arctic Circle have tripled since
2010, a trend directly tied to climate change and increasing loss of sea
ice in the far north, scientists reported in a March study published in
the journal Geophysical Research Letters. As sea ice vanishes, more
water is able to evaporate, adding moisture to the warming atmosphere.
“It’s going to go with the temperatures,” said co-author Robert
Holzworth, an atmospheric physicist at the University of Washington in
Seattle.
These electrical storms threaten boreal forests fringing the Arctic, as
they spark fires in remote regions already baking under the
round-the-clock summer sun. Boreal Siberia in Russia gets more lightning
than any other Arctic region, Holzworth said.
The paper also documented more frequent lightning over the Arctic’s
treeless tundra regions, as well as above the Arctic Ocean and pack ice.
In August 2019, lightning even struck within 60 miles (100 kilometers)
of the North Pole, the researchers found.
In Alaska alone, thunderstorm activity is on track to increase
three-fold by the end of the century if current climate trends continue,
according to two studies by scientists at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, published over the last year
in the journal Climate Dynamics.
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“What used to be very rare is now just rare,” said Rick Thoman, a
climate scientist with the University of Alaska Fairbanks. As the parade
of Arctic storms this week demonstrated, lightning is already appearing
in unexpected places, he said. “I have no memory of three consecutive
days of this kind of thing” in the Arctic.
With the sharp uptick in lightning, Siberia has seen
increasingly ferocious forest fires in recent years. This week, the
Russian army deployed water-dropping aircraft to douse flames
burning some nearly 2 million acres (800,000 hectares) of forest,
while the hardest-hit region of Yakutia has been in a state of
emergency for weeks.
Meanwhile, mid-June lightning sparked one of the biggest fires this
summer in Alaska, scorching more than 18,000 acres of tundra about
125 miles (200 km) north of the Arctic Circle in the Noatak National
Preserve in the northwestern corner of the state.
Warming in the Arctic is also encouraging the growth of vegetation
on northern Alaska's tundra, adding further fuel for fires,
scientists said.
By the end of the century, twice as much Alaska tundra could burn on
a regular basis than was the norm in the past, with fires occurring
four times more frequently, according to researchers at the
International Arctic Research Center in Fairbanks.
On the water, the lightning is an increasing hazard to mariners, and
vessel traffic is increasing as sea ice retreats, Holzworth said.
People can become lightning rods and usually try to get low for
safety. That's tough to do on flat tundra or ocean expanse.
“What you really need is to pay better attention to the lightning
forecasts,” he said.
(Reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage, Alaska; Editing by Steve
Gorman, Katy Daigle and Cynthia Osterman)
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