Russia in a changing climate

  • Debra Javeline
  • , Robert Orttung
  • , Graeme Robertson
  • , Richard Arnold
  • , Andrew Barnes
  • , Laura Henry
  • , Edward Holland
  • , Mariya Omelicheva
  • , Peter Rutland
  • , Edward Schatz
  • , Caress Schenk
  • , Andrei Semenov
  • , Valerie Sperling
  • , Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom
  • , Mikhail Troitskiy
  • , Judyth Twigg
  • , Susanne Wengle

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

12 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Climate change will shape the future of Russia, and vice versa, regardless of who rules in the Kremlin. The world's largest country is warming faster than Earth as a whole, occupies more than half the Arctic Ocean coastline, and is waging a carbon-intensive war while increasingly isolated from the international community and its efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Officially, the Russian government argues that, as a major exporter of hydrocarbons, Russia benefits from maintaining global reliance on fossil fuels and from climate change itself, because warming may increase the extent and quality of its arable land, open a new year-round Arctic sea route, and make its harsh climate more livable. Drawing on the collective expertise of a large group of Russia-focused social scientists and a comprehensive literature review, we challenge this narrative. We find that Russia suffers from a variety of impacts due to climate change and is poorly prepared to adapt to these impacts. The literature review reveals that the fates of Russia's hydrocarbon-dependent economy, centralized political system, and climate-impacted population are intertwined and that research is needed on this evolving interrelationship, as global temperatures rise and the international economy decarbonizes in response. This article is categorized under: Policy and Governance > National Climate Change Policy Trans-disciplinary Perspectives > National Reviews Trans-disciplinary Perspectives > Regional Reviews.

Original languageEnglish
JournalWiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2023

Funding

The authors gratefully acknowledge the supportive academic community of The Program on New Approaches to Research and Security in Eurasia (PONARS Eurasia), as well as helpful comments from two anonymous reviewers and members of the DC Area Post‐communist Politics Social Science Workshop at George Washington University. For funding Open Access, the authors gratefully acknowledge the University of Notre Dame, George Washington University, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Francis A. Harrington Public Affairs Fund at Clark University, University of Toronto, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Insight Grant #435‐2020‐0487, Virginia Commonwealth University, Wesleyan University, and Kent State University.

FundersFunder number
Francis A. Harrington Public Affairs Fund
Wesleyan University
George Washington University
University of North Carolina at Wilmington
University of Notre Dame
Clarkson University
Virginia Commonwealth University
Kent State University
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada435‐2020‐0487
University of Toronto

    Keywords

    • adaptation
    • agriculture
    • Arctic
    • authoritarianism
    • civil society
    • climate change
    • disaster
    • flooding
    • forestry
    • fossil fuels
    • health
    • mitigation
    • Russia
    • Ukraine
    • urban
    • wildfire

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Global and Planetary Change
    • Geography, Planning and Development
    • Atmospheric Science

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