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Climate Hideout
Climate hideout
Polar city researcher resides in Longmont
By Charlie Angelo
Longmont Times-Call
LONGMONT, COLORADO — Joey Stanford is not a global warming expert. He’s not sure if it will threaten human life in the future.
“I don’t know if it will happen or not, but it’s important to prepare,” he said.
Stanford, who works for a London-based computer company from his home in Longmont, is part of a team of volunteers working toward a survival plan in the event of extreme global warming in the future.
He is a leading researcher for the Polar City Project and has volunteered to be a resident in the first polar city.
According to www.polarcity.org, “Polar cities are proposed sustainable, high-population-density cities, to be built near the arctic rim, designed to house human beings in the future, in the event that global warming causes the central and middle regions of the Earth to become uninhabitable for a long period of time.”
The Polar City Project was started in January 2007 by Dan Bloom. Alaska, northern Canada, Norway, Iceland and Russia are potential sites for polar cities, Bloom said in an e-mail. The work of British scientist and author James Lovelock inspired the idea, he said.
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Because of myriad design questions and a lack of major investors, however, it’s not likely to be built until after 2020, according to Stanford.
“Right now, we’re trying to get a handle on what it would take to get this going,” he said.
Some of the logistical issues Stanford faces are food and water supply, fire suppression, the process of moving people into the structures and protection from polar bears.
“There are just so many aspects involved,” Stanford said. “Who would govern these polar cities, for instance?”
All of these unknown variables make it impossible to accurately predict the construction costs of a polar city at this point, he said.
Polar cities might never be built, Stanford acknowledged, but he said his research will still be valuable.
He sees a parallel between sustaining life in Earth’s polar regions and doing so on Mars.
“Even if they aren’t used to solve global warming,” he said, “these ideas are reusable for space missions.”
The Polar City Project is currently focused on increasing its exposure and finding funding, Stanford said.
“We’re using the worst-case scenario to drive research and encourage thought,” he said.
Charlie Angelo can be reached at 303-684-5253 or tcreporter4@times-call.com.




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