Global warming heats up Canada’s North

by Charles Ker
Staff writer

Projected global warming in Canada’s northwest over the next 50 years would
result in more forest fires, landslides and significantly reduced water levels
in lakes according to a study commissioned by the federal government.

A six-year regional study of the effect of climate change in the Mackenzie
Basin was recently completed and results of “what-if” scenarios presented to
stakeholders in the area.

“It’s not just a matter of whether climate warming will change the physical
capability of the land itself, but what happens to those people who live and
work in the areas in question,” says Stewart Cohen, project leader for the
Mackenzie Basin Impact Study.

The United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has concluded that
increased concentrations of carbon dioxide and other trace gases will lead to a
warming of the world’s climate. Retreating permafrost could potentially release
huge sources of methane trapped by ice in the Canadian northwest.

Cohen, a member of UBC’s Sustainable Development Research Institute (SDRI) and
an Environment Canada scientist, led a team of researchers drawn from
universities, institutes and government research centres across the country.
Stakeholders involved in the study included representatives from aboriginal
groups and industry as well as municipal, territorial, provincial and federal
governments.

With a total area of 1.8 million square kilometres, the Mackenzie drainage
basin is the largest of any river system in Canada. Stretching 4,241
kilometres, the Mackenzie River is the second longest river in North America
next to the Mississippi.

Cohen says the purpose of the study was to produce an integrated regional
assessment of climate change scenarios for the entire watershed. He adds that
the study is one of the first of its kind to assess climate change impacts on
terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems as well as the communities which depend
on them.

A warming trend of 1.5 C this century, plus other signs of climate warming in
the basin, such as thawed permafrost, prompted a study of the area which
encompasses parts of the Yukon and Northwest Territories as well as northern
B.C., Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Cohen says the basin may be particularly sensitive to variations in its climate
because it has many transition zones such as the tree line and the northern
limits of agriculture.

“In the North, agriculture could quite conceivably expand so the question
becomes what would it expand onto,” says Cohen. “It could be wildlife habitat,
forestry or land on aboriginal territory. How would stakeholders respond?”

Scenarios of climate change suggest that the region could warm up by 4 to 5 C
during the middle of the 21st century. These scenarios would affect the land,
water and wildlife in many ways: water levels in Great Bear and Great Slave
lakes would decline to below current minimum levels; forest yields would
decline due to an increase in forest fires; increased thawing of the permafrost
and accompanying landslides would occur in the Beaufort Sea coastal zone and
Mackenzie Valley; peatlands would disappear from areas south of 60 degrees
north and expand in northern areas; and caribou would be harmed by a rise in
summer temperatures, which would probably be accompanied by an increase in
harassment from insects.

A full report of the Mackenzie Basin Impact Study is expected in December.