Leaders | It’s not just about the penguins

The looming threat from Antarctica

A big thaw will have unexpected consequences for the rest of the world

Icebergs float in the sea off the South Orkney Islands
Photograph: Panos/Greenpeace

The Arctic and Antarctic are, fittingly, polar opposites. The first is an ocean surrounded by continents, the second a continent surrounded by an ocean. In the one, communities of indigenous people and settlers; in the other, only transients, there for a season or two. Nuclear-armed powers have faced off across the Arctic since the cold war; the same conflict saw a governance regime of peaceful scientific collaboration created for Antarctica that is more utopian in its conception than any other agreement in the annals of diplomacy. The north has the majesty of polar bears, the south the pathos of penguins. The two are united in facing profound upheaval because of global warming. But compared with the changes affecting the Arctic, those threatening the Antarctic are greatly underappreciated.

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “It’s not just about the penguins”

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