Zürcher Nachrichten - At the gateway to the Arctic, a world in turmoil

EUR -
AED 3.831008
AFN 72.9273
ALL 98.419365
AMD 410.272296
ANG 1.872217
AOA 957.497491
ARS 1061.69363
AUD 1.666436
AWG 1.877446
AZN 1.766157
BAM 1.955191
BBD 2.097547
BDT 124.141359
BGN 1.954564
BHD 0.391978
BIF 3071.343992
BMD 1.043025
BND 1.410861
BOB 7.178765
BRL 6.347867
BSD 1.038877
BTN 88.318509
BWP 14.358531
BYN 3.399742
BYR 20443.296678
BZD 2.08825
CAD 1.497941
CDF 2993.482519
CHF 0.932344
CLF 0.037343
CLP 1030.409268
CNY 7.610327
CNH 7.604124
COP 4547.284581
CRC 524.136854
CUC 1.043025
CUP 27.640172
CVE 110.230689
CZK 25.128878
DJF 184.992418
DKK 7.459296
DOP 63.260309
DZD 140.605234
EGP 53.07248
ERN 15.64538
ETB 129.499591
FJD 2.416742
FKP 0.826057
GBP 0.829268
GEL 2.930614
GGP 0.826057
GHS 15.271247
GIP 0.826057
GMD 75.098129
GNF 8975.206315
GTQ 8.004508
GYD 217.342349
HKD 8.11093
HNL 26.370792
HRK 7.481523
HTG 135.907696
HUF 413.964244
IDR 16867.075692
ILS 3.805968
IMP 0.826057
INR 88.607612
IQD 1360.876404
IRR 43898.321706
ISK 145.106091
JEP 0.826057
JMD 162.539407
JOD 0.739607
JPY 163.153207
KES 134.118253
KGS 90.743478
KHR 4174.700554
KMF 486.180213
KPW 938.722223
KRW 1508.652523
KWD 0.3212
KYD 0.865731
KZT 545.580179
LAK 22737.922437
LBP 93028.043448
LKR 305.005062
LRD 188.55131
LSL 19.125747
LTL 3.079783
LVL 0.630915
LYD 5.104411
MAD 10.455446
MDL 19.135044
MGA 4901.474333
MKD 61.515852
MMK 3387.705621
MNT 3544.199972
MOP 8.316611
MRU 41.31514
MUR 49.225715
MVR 16.064848
MWK 1801.339303
MXN 20.937863
MYR 4.702006
MZN 66.653209
NAD 19.125747
NGN 1616.209432
NIO 38.228101
NOK 11.812523
NPR 141.310015
NZD 1.84523
OMR 0.401355
PAB 1.038877
PEN 3.868396
PGK 4.212689
PHP 61.402621
PKR 289.160894
PLN 4.262349
PYG 8100.478589
QAR 3.787121
RON 4.976902
RSD 116.994099
RUB 107.216627
RWF 1448.149239
SAR 3.917924
SBD 8.74426
SCR 14.545033
SDG 627.378049
SEK 11.510661
SGD 1.414236
SHP 0.826057
SLE 23.850842
SLL 21871.723041
SOS 593.715196
SRD 36.642529
STD 21588.518693
SVC 9.090171
SYP 2620.632713
SZL 19.121048
THB 35.692277
TJS 11.364862
TMT 3.661019
TND 3.31027
TOP 2.442868
TRY 36.68318
TTD 7.050805
TWD 34.034928
TZS 2467.232032
UAH 43.568738
UGX 3810.81382
USD 1.043025
UYU 46.335577
UZS 13393.830944
VES 53.689991
VND 26550.210048
VUV 123.830057
WST 2.881657
XAF 655.752886
XAG 0.03535
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.818828
XDR 0.792453
XOF 655.752886
XPF 119.331742
YER 261.1475
ZAR 19.110344
ZMK 9388.488165
ZMW 28.750051
ZWL 335.853734
  • RELX

    -0.3100

    45.47

    -0.68%

  • NGG

    0.8200

    58.5

    +1.4%

  • SCS

    -0.5800

    11.74

    -4.94%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    8.39

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.86

    +0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0100

    7.27

    -0.14%

  • GSK

    0.1700

    33.6

    +0.51%

  • RBGPF

    59.9600

    59.96

    +100%

  • BTI

    0.1131

    36.24

    +0.31%

  • RIO

    -0.0900

    58.64

    -0.15%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    23.56

    0%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    23.16

    +0.22%

  • AZN

    0.9100

    65.35

    +1.39%

  • BCC

    -0.2600

    122.75

    -0.21%

  • BP

    0.1900

    28.6

    +0.66%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    12.06

    +0.91%

At the gateway to the Arctic, a world in turmoil
At the gateway to the Arctic, a world in turmoil / Photo: Olivier MORIN - AFP

At the gateway to the Arctic, a world in turmoil

Sled dog breeder David Daley lives at the gateway to the Canadian Arctic, occupying a front-row seat to the march of global warming, and he senses calamity ahead.

Text size:

"For all the devastation that we're doing to her, she's not going to sit still, our planet Mother Earth will punish us," Daley says.

Daley's hometown of Churchill is an isolated settlement at the edge of the Hudson Bay where global warming unfolds at triple the pace of much of the rest of the world, causing the Arctic ice to gradually disappear.

A member of the Metis people, one of three Indigenous groups in Canada, the 59-year-old grandfather lives close to nature, surrounded by his 46 dogs, at the point where the tundra ends and the boreal forest begins.

But every year, he fears that the snow will arrive late, and the impact that has on his sled dogs.

"They're just waiting for winter like the rest of us right now," Daley said. "This is like a culture that's dying."

In summer and winter, Daley travels through this region where rocky terrain, moss, tall grasses and black spruce forests prevail. At night, the displays of light known as the aurora borealis often flicker in the high-latitude skies.

Daley has been hunting here all his life and has seen the wildlife change up close, some species vanishing and others arriving.

"There was hardly any moose here when I was a kid. Now there's moose everywhere," said Daley, who uses his Indigenous knowledge to earn money as a tourist guide.

"When I was a kid hunting, fishing and trapping here, there were no pine martens.

"There's sharptail grouse moving in now where I've never... harvested one till last year."

His observations echo scientific studies: Global warming is endangering Arctic species, especially by opening the doors to other animals from further south.

Both animals and vegetation are migrating north. For Daley, humans have "no choice," they must "adapt" as animals are forced to do.

- Prowling polar bears -

Adaptation includes a newfound need for closer coexistence with the emblematic predator of the Arctic region: the polar bear.

During the Cold War, a joint Canadian-US military installation in Churchill stood guard against a possible Soviet attack coming over the North Pole. The installation is now deserted, and local concerns today concentrate more on polar bears.

Due to global warming, ice no longer covers the Hudson Bay for as long each winter, forcing the polar bears to spend more time on land and nearer to humans. Often hungry and weak, the bears wander closer to settlements.

Venturing around the town requires precautions: a gun, bear repellent and the need to walk in groups after dark or in poor visibility.

Everyone in Churchill has a story about a run-in with a polar bear.

"I don't remember feeling unsafe during summertime. No, no. I used to play on the rocks," said Danielle Daley, the 33-year-old daughter of David Daley. "Today, it's different. I won't let my kids play on the rocks."

The slender young woman recounts her fright at seeing a bear run past her house in July, followed closely by the Manitoba Natural Resources bureau patrol vehicle with its sirens wailing.

It's even more complicated in the fall, when the bears are starving after months of failing to find food on land, without a seal in sight.

"We're at the beginning of the busiest time of year for us when the bears will be coming through Churchill on their way north to the first ice on the Hudson Bay," said Ian Van Nest, a wildlife officer.

For Halloween night, October 31, a special set-up is put in place, Van Nest said.

Clad in a bullet-proof vest, with a rifle slung over his shoulder and a walkie-talkie on his belt, the stern-faced Van Nest and his fellow officers go on patrol.

They even deploy helicopters to spot roaming bears and ensure they do not come near children collecting candy.

"Otherwise we could use cracker shells. It's a loud bang and a flash that'll haze the bear away as well," Van Nest said.

The town is also equipped with new radars that can detect polar bears within two kilometers (1.2 miles) of its most outlying homes, even at night or thick fog.

Around Churchill, the polar bear population has been in decline since the 1980s but still hovers around 800, about the same number as human inhabitants of the town.

- 'Opportunities are there' -

Not everyone sees these climate-related changes in a bad light.

"You've got to look for the wins in all of this," said Churchill Mayor Michael Spence, a member of the Cree, the most populous Indigenous group of the First Nations in Canada.

An increase in tourism, along with development of the port, have gone hand in hand with rising temperatures.

"The opportunities are there for local people to have... economic growth," said Spence, who grew up locally.

This remote corner of Manitoba province is inaccessible by car from the rest of Canada, yet a few thousand tourists find their way each year, by air or rail, drawn by the increased presence of the polar bears.

And the melting sea ice allows ships to access the city's port, the only deep-water port in the Canadian Arctic, for more months each year than before.

The mayor dreams of transitioning Churchill into a bustling port for grain grown in increasingly more northern areas, and eventually for minerals, more easily extracted in the far north due to thawing.

A large part of Canada's mining potential is found in the far north, including deposits of diamonds, gold, tungsten, uranium, and rare earth elements.

But the thawing of the soil can also hamper mining prospects. Railways that once delivered raw materials to port have become less stable, and even at times useless.

In 2017, a major melt led to flooding that damaged rail lines, and rail transport was cut off for more than 18 months. Since then, the port has been largely idle, handling only a few ships per year. At the back of the gigantic silos, old rail cars rust amid wild grass.

- Poverty -

For some residents of Churchill, grinding poverty relegates concerns about global warming to the background.

Dilapidated homes, some hastily patched up, line the streets alongside prefabricated buildings on cinder blocks, seemingly unsuited for winter temperatures that can plunge below -40 degrees Celsius (-40 degrees Fahrenheit).

Abandoned cars, vans, snowmobiles and quads are a frequent sight, often stripped for spare parts.

In the early period of European colonization, Churchill was an important outpost of the fur trade. Today, both poverty and the region's Indigenous roots are apparent.

Fully 60 percent of the population is Indigenous (Inuit, Metis and First Nation groups like Cree and Dene), while in Canada as a whole the number is only five percent and in Manitoba 18 percent. Unemployment, substandard housing and discrimination prevail.

About 64 percent of children here live below the poverty line.

UN climate experts already said in their March report that these people's intimate knowledge must be taken into account in the fight against climate change.

At November's COP27 climate summit in Egypt, some activists will press for policies that take into account Indigenous ancestral practices, since their lands host 80 percent of the world's biodiversity.

David Daley dreams of an awakening.

"We must, as Indigenous people, lead the reconciliation with our mother, the Earth," he says.

L.Rossi--NZN