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Norway`s Arctic archipelago witnesses highest ever recorded temperature
Rising temperatures would thaw the frozen ground underpinning many buildings, roads and airports and could cause more avalanches and landslides.
Highlights
- Arctic islands are warming faster than almost anywhere on Earth.
- Warming climate also threatens Arctic wildlife such as polar bears and seals which depend on the sea ice cover.
Oslo: Temperatures at Norway`s Svalbard archipelago, about midway between the mainland and the North Pole, hit a record high of 21.7 degrees Celsius on Friday (July 24, 2020), Norway`s Meteorological Institute said.
The Arctic islands are warming faster than almost anywhere on Earth, highlighting risks in other parts of the Arctic from Alaska to Siberia, a Norwegian report said last year.
"A 41-year-old record has been broken in Longyearbyen," the Meteorological Institute said on Twitter.
Between 1700 and 1800 CET (1500-1600 GMT), the temperature measured 21.7 degrees Celsius, 0.4 degrees above the previous record from 1979, it added.
Home to more than 2,000 people, Longyearbyen, the main settlement in Svalbard, is about 1,300 kilometres (800 miles) from the North Pole.
The Norwegian Centre for Climate Studies said last February average temperatures in Svalbard had leapt between three and five degrees Celsius (5.4-9.0 Fahrenheit) since the early 1970s and could rise by a total of 10C (18F) by 2100, if world greenhouse gas emissions keep climbing.
Rising temperatures would thaw the frozen ground underpinning many buildings, roads and airports and could cause more avalanches and landslides, it added.
Two people died in 2015 when an avalanche destroyed 10 houses in Longyearbyen.
A warming climate also threatens Arctic wildlife such as polar bears and seals which depend on the sea ice cover.