永久冻土
全球变暖
热岩溶
气候变化
环境科学
自然灾害
关键基础设施
大规模浪费
环境资源管理
地质学
地理
岩土工程
计算机科学
气象学
海洋学
计算机安全
山崩
作者
Jan Hjort,D. A. Streletskiy,Guy Doré,Qingbai Wu,Kevin Bjella,Miska Luoto
标识
DOI:10.1038/s43017-021-00247-8
摘要
The warming and thawing of ice-rich permafrost pose considerable threat to the integrity of polar and high-altitude infrastructure, in turn jeopardizing sustainable development. In this Review, we explore the extent and costs of observed and predicted infrastructure damage associated with permafrost degradation, and the methods available to mitigate such adverse consequences. Permafrost change imposes various threats to infrastructure, namely through warming, active layer thickening and thaw-related hazards such as thermokarst and mass wasting. These impacts, often linked to anthropogenic warming, are exacerbated through increased human activity. Observed infrastructure damage is substantial, with up to 80% of buildings in some Russian cities and ~30% of some road surfaces in the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau reporting damage. Under anthropogenic warming, infrastructure damage is projected to continue, with 30–50% of critical circumpolar infrastructure thought to be at high risk by 2050. Accordingly, permafrost degradation-related infrastructure costs could rise to tens of billions of US dollars by the second half of the century. Several mitigation techniques exist to alleviate these impacts, including convection embankments, thermosyphons and piling foundations, with proven success at preserving and cooling permafrost and stabilizing infrastructure. To be effective, however, better understanding is needed on the regions at high risk. Permafrost thaw and degradation threaten circumpolar infrastructure. This Review documents observed and projected infrastructure impacts, as well as the mitigation strategies available to minimize them.
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