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Keywords
Climate (campaign title)
Climate change
Climate change impacts
Faces
Headshots
Indigenous People
KWCI (GPI)
Nenets
Outdoors
Permafrost melt
Portraits
Preschoolers (2-4)
Sunsets
Tribal dresses
Indigenous Nenets Children in Yamal Peninsula
Nasta and Sergey Vanuyto, Nenets children from a small family who doesn't own and herd reindeer. They live instead in a more permanently based settlement and to support themselves they depend on fresh fish and on the help from relatives in larger tribes. The entire region where they live is under heavy threat from global warming as temperatures increase and Russia’s ancient permafrost melts.
Restrictions
No Fundraising
Unique identifier:
GP01VL3
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
30/07/2009
Locations:
Russia
,
Siberia
,
Yamal Peninsula
,
Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug
Credit line:
© Will Rose / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★★★ (B)
Containers
Shoot:
Climate Voices from Russia
The Yamal peninsula, a remote region of north-west Siberia, is under serious threat from climate change as Russia’s ancient permafrost melts. It is one of the world's last great wildernesses and home for the indigenous Nenets people where they have herded their reindeer for 1000 years. Traditionally the Nenets travel across the frozen Ob river in November and set up camp in the southern forests. These days this annual winter pilgrimage is delayed. Herders say that the peninsula's weather is increasingly unpredictable, with unseasonal snowstorms in May, and milder longer autumns. In winter temperatures used to go down to -50C, now they are typically -30C. The snow is melting sooner, quicker and faster than before. Scientists are extremely concerned that if the global temperatures continues to climb, millions of tonnes of methane locked in the permafrost will be released. A ticking time bomb, a tipping point that will accelerate climate change to irreversible levels.
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