December 9, 2005
Arctic residents want
help adapting to climate change
ITK leader among several
demanding adaptation funds in Montreal
JANE
GEORGE
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Muctar
Akomalik of Arctic Bay and Naalak Nappaluk of Kangiqsujuaq are witnesses to
the changes in the climate they have seen in their communities. They spoke at
the U. N. conference on climate change in Inuktitut with the assistance of interpreters
Matiusi Inutiq, Martha Flaherty and Eli Angyiou. (PHOTO BY JANE GEORGE)
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MONTREAL - This week, Inuit
spread the word inside the United Nations Climate Change Conference about the
need to focus on action to help Inuit adapt to climate change.
"Climate change is
a reality in the Arctic. We are already seeing frightening impacts," said
Jose Kusugak, the president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami.
And the cost to Inuit of
adapting to these impacts was high on the list of concerns ITK wanted to bring
home.
Kusugak didn't ask for
anything concrete, yet - but he did say Inuit are eager to collaborate with
others to seek solutions and actions that will help Inuit adapt.
To bring this message to
life, Kusugak told a group of international journalists how he was born 55 years
ago in a snow house near Repulse Bay on May 2, but if he returned next year
on that same date, he probably wouldn't see enough snow to build an igloo.
ITK staged two successful
events at the conference, and its launching of an electronic version of Unikkaaqatigiit,
a book that records Inuit perspectives on climate change across Canada, drew
more than 200 delegates and media. At the book launch, Kusugak said Inuit are
"global environment experts" due to their long familiarity with the
land.
"If anyone knows about
climate change, it's people who live their lives outside," Kusugak said.
Kusugak brought along four
elders from the four Inuit regions to offer observations on impacts ranging
from thinning ice, shriveled berries, high winds, hot weather, sick caribou,
dead fish, more polynyas and shoreline erosion.
The point of their presentations
was clearly to show the high human cost of adaptation in northern Canada.
John Keogak from Sachs
Harbor in the Northwest Territories spoke about "devastating" changes
and damage to the environment, as warmer temperatures, severe storms and higher
seas are eroding coasts and causing shorelines, buildings and even graveyards
to collapse into the water. In winter, thinner and later ice formation makes
travel difficult and dangerous.
"We say, 'keep your
stick on the ice,'" Keogak said - to make sure the ice isn't too thin.
Economic hardship due to
changing weather was emphasized by Muctar Akomalik from Nunavut. There's a lack
of snow near his community of Arctic Bay, he said, because it's often blown
away by harsh winds. This means residents have to buy tents for hunting trips
instead of building snowhouses, and they have to have all-terrain-vehicles as
well as snowmobiles, so they can travel on the land.
Pauline Anderson from Northwest
River in Nunatsiavut is concerned about changes in the marine environment, such
as more open water and thinner ice, which are linked to climate change. And
these changes, she said, have already cost lives - among those who were lost
and among searchers who went out to look for them.
The many changes to the
environment worry Naalak Nappaluk from Kangiqsujuaq, because of their impact
on health.
"Due to climate change,
due to circumstances beyond our control, there are a lot of changes in the country
food we eat," Napaaluk said.
The elders' messages resounded
with representatives of other indigenous peoples who attended the ITK event.
Aqqaluk Lynge, head of
Greenland's Inuit Circumpolar Conference, related how 20 years ago scientists
could tell him about the impact of climate change on ice but not about the possible
impacts on people.
"They knew what the
impact would be on polar bears and marine mammals, but not on the humans,"
Lynge said. "We need to put the human face on it."
Others called for a larger
debate on climate change, to show how it is affecting peoples' livelihoods.
Another Arctic event at
the UN conference, this time with Arctic Council officials, including Canada's
Arctic Ambassador Jack Anawak, showed the Arctic Council is still having trouble
moving actions that could help Arctic residents adapt.
The Arctic Council has
eight nation members throughout the circumpolar world as well as six indigenous
permanent participants - and this body can recommend policies to its members.
To date, it's produced more studies than policy recommendations.
Vitali Churkin, the Arctic
Council's senior Arctic official in Russia, was unable to promise any immediate
action on climate change, although he said another assessment of the impact
on oil and gas development in the Arctic will be finished next year.
The Unikkaaqatigiit study,
available online at www.itk.ca, was conducted in partnership with Université
Laval, the National Aboriginal Health Organization, Inuit land-claim organizations
and 17 Inuit communities.
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