Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Record-Breaking-Heat-Wave-in-Siberia-27MDHUN3B4C.htmlDownloadConceptually similarRecord Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaGP1SU28ECompleted★★★★★★Record Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaGP1SU28FCompleted★★★★Record Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaGP1SU28GCompleted★★★★★★Record Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaGP1SU28HCompleted★★★★Record Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaGP1SU28ICompleted★★★★Permafrost Melt Damage in Yamal PeninsulaGP01VMACompleted★★★★Yar-Sale in Yamal PeninsulaGP01VYGCompleted★★★★Heat Wave Hits FranceGP0STTJOTReadyForCataloguing★★★★★★Nenet Sledges in Yamal PeninsulaGP01VJTCompleted★★★★View AllGP1SU28JRecord Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaA heatwave has been scorching most of the Arctic in June 2020. A record was broken on 20 June when the temperature hit 100.4 degrees fahrenheit (more than 37 degrees celsius) in Verkhoyansk, a Siberian town in Russia and one of the coldest towns on Earth.Russia's sprawling Siberia region is being transformed by climate change that has brought with it warmer temperatures, forest fires and growing swarms of hungry moth larvae. Siberia is heating up at a much faster rate than the rest of the planet. That is causing the permafrost to melt.The Russian government must take serious measures to combat climate change and move forward with a just transition to end the oil age, to prevent the multiplying threats of climate change in the future.Locations:Arctic-Russia-SiberiaDate:22 Jun, 2020Credit:© Elena Makurina / GreenpeaceMaximum size:3507px X 2480pxRestrictions:FILE AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD BY EXTERNAL MEDIA UNTIL 09/03/2026. TERMS OF DELIVERY: NO THIRD PARTIES, NO RESALE, NO ARCHIVE, FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY, NOT FOR MARKETING OR ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS. CREDIT-LINE COMPULSORY.Keywords:Climate (campaign title)-Climate change-Climate change impacts-Extreme weather-Graphics (Record Type)-Heatwave-KWCI (GPI)-MapsShoot:Record Breaking Heat Wave in SiberiaA heatwave has been scorching most of the Arctic in June 2020. A record was broken on 20 June when the temperature hit 100.4 degrees fahrenheit (more than 37 degrees celsius) in Verkhoyansk, a Siberian town in Russia and one of the coldest towns on Earth.Russia's sprawling Siberia region is being transformed by climate change that has brought with it warmer temperatures, forest fires and growing swarms of hungry moth larvae. Siberia is heating up at a much faster rate than the rest of the planet. That is causing the permafrost to melt.The Russian government must take serious measures to combat climate change and move forward with a just transition to end the oil age, to prevent the multiplying threats of climate change in the future.