A hi-tech virtual Arctic is being created by Siberian scientists to predict climate change and monitor the impact of mining and oil production on the roof of the world.
The frozen northern region is thought to be rich with natural resources, particularly oil and gas, and a number of countries including Russia plan exploiting untapped reserves.
However, environmentalists have expressed concerns about the possible knock-on effect of industrialization and pollution.
But a new computer project being developed by experts at the Siberian branch of the Russian Academy of Science will help answer many of the questions. The Digital Smart Arctic will simulate realistic processes taking place in the environment and predict any problems linked to mining and drilling for oil and gas.
It will also be able to model complex safety systems, analyze pollution sources and their impact, study volcanic activity in the area and look at the climate of the Arctic basin.
Being designed at the RAS Institute of Computational Mathematics and Mathematical Geophysics (ICM&MG), it will be able to make predictions decades in advance.
A presentation on the project was given to scientists in Moscow by Sergey Kabanikhin, the deputy head of the ICM&MG.
While it will have many uses, including being able to monitor global weather patterns and natural disasters, it will be of particular interest in the safe development of oil and gas.
The system will be able to incorporate data from a number of satellites and land stations across Europe, Siberia and the Russian Far East.
That information will then be incorporated into models mimicking processes in the Arctic to monitor and predict any changes in the environment.
Data on what is happening in Northern Russia will be given special emphasis with patterns used to create both short-term and long-term economic planning, for agriculture, mining and the development of transport infrastructure.
PHOTO CREDIT: Sergey Anisimov.