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Dillingham, Alaska, United States
Alaska Public Media /
July 21, 2021
Bristol Bay’s 2021 sockeye run is the largest on record: 63.2 million fish have returned to the bay, breaking the 2018 record of 62.9 million.
Read article
on Alaska Public Media
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Bethel, Alaska, United States
Yereth Rosen /
ArcticToday /
August 11, 2021
A decades-long decline in salmon in the Yukon River has reached a crisis this year, forcing harvest closures and prompting emergency shipments of salmon from other regions of Alaska to river residents who are otherwise facing food shortages.
Read article
on ArcticToday
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Utskarpen, Rana, Nordland, Norway
Synnøve Sundby Fallmyr /
NRK /
August 18, 2021
All farmer Arild Stenhaug is left with is tiny berries that cannot be sold. He believes the cause is climate change. "We have to listen to a farmer who has lost everything," says a researcher.
Read article
on NRK
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Khatanga, Krasnoyarskiy, Russia
ArcticToday /
August 15, 2021
A state of emergency was declared in mid-August in Khatanga, a small town on the banks of the river of the same name in Russia’s far northern Taymyr Peninsula, after more than 1,200 dead reindeer were found scattered on the river’s banks.
Read article
on ArcticToday
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CBC /
September 7, 2021
It's not the first time snow geese have died in large numbers in western Nunavut. The cause of this event is under investigation, but overpopulation could have played a role, says the Canadian Wildlife Service.
Read article
on CBC
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Scotland, United Kingdom
BBC News /
August 31, 2021
Scottish Water says storage levels at some sites are at 66% amid one of the driest summers in 160 years.
Read article
on BBC News
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Inuvik, Northwest Territories, Canada
Mackenzie Scott /
CBC /
It wasn’t part of your imagination if you thought it was warmer this summer in the Northwest Territories. Inuvik experienced its seventh warmest summer on record according to data from Environment and Climate Change Canada.
Read article
on CBC
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Russia
The Moscow Times /
September 2, 2021
Banned goods would include disposable plastic straws, plates, glasses, lids and appliances; coffee capsules; cotton swabs; opaque and colored PET (thermoplastic polyester) bottles; boxes and packs for tobacco products; blister packaging (except for medicines); egg cartons; and several types of bags.
Read article
on The Moscow Times
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The Northern Climate Observer is published by the
Center for Climate and Health. We track news coverage from across the circumpolar north and provide readers with a curated roundup of climate change related events. Thank you for reading our newsletter and for paying attention to our changing world.
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