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Published: Monday the 18/04/2011

State of the Arctic Coast 2010 – Scientific Review and Outlook

The coast is a key interface in the Arctic environment. It is a  locus of human activity, a rich band of biodiversity, critical  habitat, and high productivity, and among the most dynamic  components of the circumpolar landscape. The Arctic coastal  interface is a sensitive and important zone of interaction between  land and sea, a region that provides essential ecosystem services  and supports indigenous human lifestyles; a zone of expanding  infrastructure investment and growing security concerns; and an area  in which climate warming is expected to trigger landscape  instability, rapid responses to change, and increased hazard  exposure. The circumpolar Arctic coast is arguably one of the most  critical zones in terms of the rapidity and the severity of  environmental change and the implications for human communities  dependent on coastal resources.
 
 We are pleased to announce the official release of the international  report on the State of the Arctic Coast 2010 – Scientific  Review and Outlook, sponsored by the International  Arctic Science Committee (IASC), the international Land-Ocean  Interactions in the Coastal Zone (LOICZ) Project, the Arctic  Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP), and the International  Permafrost Association (IPA). A collaborative effort by 47 lead and  contributing authors from 10 nations including all those bordering  the Arctic coast and others with Arctic interests, this report grew  from a recommendation by the Workshop on Arctic Coastal Zones at  Risk, convened in Tromsø, Norway, in October 2007. The report was  peer-reviewed and released in draft form for open public review in  2010.
 
The report is available for viewing and download at www.arcticcoasts.org www.arcticcoasts.org  and is  published by the Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht, LOICZ International  Project Office, at the Institute of Coastal Research, Geesthacht,  Germany.

Photo: Michael Fritz