Inuk fishing captain Joey Angnatok is part of a global effort to monitor the effects where climate change is occurring three times faster than in the south
Spear-meets-sensor approach is what Far North needs to tackle climate change
The first time Joey Angnatok crossed the ice, he was an infant, bundled up in his mother’s arms, returning home from the hospital. That was 1976 and the ice around Nain, the northernmost community on the Labrador coast, was as strong and dependable as a mother’s love. These record-breaking years – what scientists call anomalies, outliers and extremes – are the telltale signs of the world warming due to climate change.
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