| Canadian Researchers Warn Of New Arctic Worries 
    CANADA: April 4, 2008
 
 
 VANCOUVER, British Columbia - Canada's massive Mackenzie Delta is feeling 
    the impact of climate change faster than expected and could foretell of 
    problems elsewhere in the Arctic, a Canadian researcher said on Thursday.
 
 
 Melting ocean ice is apparently allowing larger storm surges to flood into 
    the delta in Canada's far north, a change that could have an impact on 
    energy development plans for the region, said Lance Lesack, who has been 
    tracking environmental changes in the region for more than a decade.
 
 "With receding sea ice, suddenly we're seeing bigger storm surges moving 
    into the delta from storms that really aren't any bigger than they have been 
    historically," said Lesack, a geographer from Simon Fraser University near 
    Vancouver.
 
 "The ice acts as a blanket, but when you get open water you can get really 
    big waves and swells forming," Lesack said in an interview.
 
 The delta, where the Mackenzie River flows into the Beaufort Sea in the 
    Northwest Territories, covers an area about one-third the size of 
    Switzerland and contains some 45,000 lakes. It is sparsely populated, but 
    home to a range of wildlife and fish.
 
 Lesack and other Canadian researchers, following up on a study they did in 
    1997, had expected the higher sea levels they found, but were surprised to 
    find water levels in some lower elevation lakes had risen three times faster 
    than predicted.
 
 In other areas of the delta, shallow lakes at higher elevations, which 
    require flooding due to ice jams on the north-flowing Mackenzie to replenish 
    their water supply, are drying out because of the faster melting and reduced 
    flooding, the researchers reported.
 
 "The apparent changes in sea level and river ice breakup occurring in the 
    Mackenzie represent the first case we are aware of where two global change 
    mechanisms may be simultaneously forcing a major Arctic ecosystem in 
    differing ways," Lesack and colleagues wrote in a recent study on the 
    region.
 
 The rate of change seems to have risen significantly, starting in the 1990s, 
    and Lesack said the increase in storm surges is probably also happening in 
    other Arctic river deltas, although research data is limited.
 
 The study's results were originally published in December in the journal of 
    the American Geophysical Union but not widely distributed outside of 
    academic circles until this week.
 
 The researchers said greater than expected storm surges and coastal flooding 
    should be a concern for companies looking at drilling in the energy-rich 
    Mackenzie Delta and areas of the Beaufort Sea.
 
 A consortium of energy companies led by Imperial Oil Ltd aims to develop the 
    C$16.2 billion ($16.2 billion) Mackenzie gas project, which would include a 
    pipeline through the Northwest Territories to southern markets.
 
 The pipeline would ship natural gas from three major fields in the delta 
    that were discovered in the 1970s -- Taglu, Niglintgak and Parsons Lake. 
    Reserves are pegged at 6 trillion cubic feet of gas.
 
 The project has been hampered by regulatory delays and surging costs.
 
 ($1=$1.00 Canadian)
 
 (Additional reporting by Jeffrey Jones, editing by Rob Wilson)
 
 
 Story by Allan Dowd
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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