Russia confirms record high temperature in Arctic Siberia
The new record of 38 Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) for a site within the Arctic Circle fits an alarming trend, scientists say.
MOSCOW — Russia’s state weather authority said on Tuesday that a remote town in northeastern Siberia had registered a record high temperature of 38 degrees Celsius (100.4 Fahrenheit) during a heat wave that has alarmed climate scientists.
The reading was first reported earlier this month in Verkhoyansk, north of the Arctic circle, prompting the World Meteorological Organization to ask Moscow to confirm the data.
[Siberia’s heat wave is a ‘warning cry’ from the Arctic, climate scientists say]
Confirming the temperature has been reached on June 17, Roman Vilfand, head of science at Russia’s Hydrometcenter, told a news conference that hotter weather was being recorded in the region because of an increase in anticyclones.
“Specialists assess that this situation will continue,” he said.
He said the “phenomenal” reading had occurred because of a powerful anticyclone in regions near the Arctic and the sun beating down around the clock.
[The Russian Arctic is seeing record-breaking heat, and an early start to wildfires]
“Verkhoyansk had still been well-known as a Pole of Cold. It recorded a record of -67.8 degrees Celsius at the end of the 1990s. Now it’s 38 degrees,” Vilfand told reporters.
The Arctic is warming at twice the speed of the global average. The WMO said last week the reading was worrying, but appeared to be consistent with warming trends.
Reporting by Polina Devitt.