BEIJING, March 1 (Xinhuanet) -- More than 60 nations,
3,000 snowmen-building children, top scientists, researchers and about
50,000 people will be involved in 228 projects in the broadest scientific
investigation yet of the Arctic and Antarctic to chart polar regions on the
front lines of global warming in a United Nations sponsored program titled
International Polar Year.
The children will build snowmen in Oslo, the
scientists will meet in Paris and researchers will get together on a polar
research vessel in Cape Town harbor in South Africa as part of the opening
ceremonies of IPY on Thursday.
Projects to be undertaken include studying marine
life in the Antarctic, mapping how winds carry pollutants to the Arctic, or
examining the health of people, polar bears or penguins.
The "year" will last until 2009 -- it often takes two
seasons to reach remote polar regions, set up equipment, leave to avoid the
winter and then return to collect the gear.
David Carlson, director of the IPY Program Office,
said the icy poles of the earth had been overlooked too long.
"This part of the planet has its problems and it
needs to get a higher level of attention," he told Reuters.
Many scientists say warming of the Arctic, where
indigenous hunting cultures and animals are under threat from receding ice, may
be a sign of damaging shifts elsewhere on the planet linked to global
warming.
And a melt of ice sheets on Greenland or Antarctica
in coming centuries would raise world sea levels, threatening cities from Tokyo
to New York and low lying coral atolls in the Pacific.
"These regions are highly vulnerable to rising
temperatures," Michel Jarraud, head of the U.N.'s World Meteorological
Organization, said in a statement. He said more monitoring stations were needed
in polar regions.
Arctic temperatures are rising fast, apparently
because water or ground, once exposed, soak up far more heat from the sun than
ice or snow. Antarctica is staying cooler, with its far bigger volume of ice
acting as a deep freeze.
The world's top climate scientists said in a U.N.
report last month that "average Arctic temperatures increased at almost twice
the global average rate in the past 100 years".
They projected that sea levels could rise by 18 to 59
cm (7.1 to 23.2 inches) by 2100, by when Arctic sea ice may disappear in
summers.
Nordic nations, with Arctic territories, fear
businesses including tourism are vulnerable to warming.
In Finland, scientists will meet Thursday in
Rovaniemi, a town which draws thousands of tourists every year with a claim to
be the home of Santa Claus. In northern Sweden, a giant balloon will be released
by a hotel carved from blocks of ice.
Countries ranging from China to Brazil will stage
ceremonies on Thursday -- some countries such as the United States and Britain
marked the start of polar year earlier this week.
The world has had polar years before, in 1882-83,
1932-33 and 1957-58.
(Agencies)