This story could very well be headlined: “When the internet came to Novaya Zemlya.”
Locals started to post photos and video of the more than 50 polar bears in their neighborhood.
Over the last week, social media, as well as online newspapers globally, have gone mad over the news coming out from one of the remotest towns on the planet, the closed military settlement of Belushaya Guba.
The little-known town on the Russian Arctic archipelago has since last autumn been struggling with polar bears walking the streets and around the corners of the apartment- and office buildings. Even walking by a baby-stroller inside an entrance, one of the video-recordings show.
Regional authorities have declared a state of emergency after the bears no longer react to noise- and light signals from guards trying to scare them off.
Belushaya Guba, like the entire Novaya Zemlya, is closed off military area. The newly upgraded air base Rogachevo is just a few kilometers outside of town.
But why don’t the bears want to leave the settlement? As previously reported by the Barents Observer, the Kara Sea off the east coast of Novaya Zemlya is this winter packed with very close drift ice.
Now, it appears like the human food-waste has a much more central role in the story than just the warming Arctic.
But first a look at the many media, including the Barents Observer, that last week jumped to conclusions pointing at climate changes when the stories about polar bears in trouble, or making trouble, found its way to global newsrooms.
The blog portal Polar Bear Science has collected links to many of the newspapers reporting about the sensational images from Novaya Zemlya.
The Guardian writes, “What polar bears in a Russian apartment block reveal about the climate crisis.”
The Washington Post writes under the headline, “A ‘mass invasion’ of polar bears is terrorizing an island town. Climate change is to blame” and the CBC makes a similar conclusion, headlining its article: “Russian Arctic town overrun by polar bears, climate change blamed.”
Mats Forsberg has sailed expeditions since 1982 and has assisted in TV productions about the polar bears in the Arctic. He has first-hand knowledge of polar bears’ behavior.
“These bears are well-fed,” he says to the Barents Observer after reviewing some of the videos.
“I would say these bears are not hanging around the houses due to climate changes. They have a huge amount of food dumped into nature by humans,» Forsberg says and concludes: “This is purely an on-site human-made problem.”
Some of the videos posted by local residents on Vkontakte show how tens of polar bears are eating garbage at the local dump site in Belushaya Guba. The bears actually look fat.
Evaluating media’s reporting, the blog site Polar Bear Science concludes: “Global warming is blamed for the problem but as is so often the case, that claim does not stand up to scrutiny.”
The blog is run by Susan Crockford, a zoologist with more than 35 years experience, including published work on the Holocene history of Arctic animals.
Read more at The Barents Observer
When I was I kid we regularly vacationed in Banff. At that time (1970’s) we would go to the Banff garbage dump to see bears. They were always there, often many of them. Sensible ecological policies then were implemented. The dump closed down. The bears were relocated far away. Garbage now is hauled out of the National Park. Now dumpsters and garbage cans are bear proof. As this article says: This polar bear “invasion” is a man made problem. Garbage management is the solution. Or, we could try a better idea: This specific problem can be solved by installing more solar panels in the US and implementing a carbon tax in Canada!
The Washington Compost and the Garbage-Can(Guardian)font page lies its no wonder the American People no longer trusts these scum-suckers anymore