© Ekaterina Ustinova A Message from a Frozen World May 12, 2025КлиматMonitoringРабочая группа по реализации программы арктического мониторинга и оценки As the world’s snow and ice vanishes and permafrost thaws, the cryosphere calls for urgent global attention Article by: Kristina Bär, Arctic Council Secretariat Every living being on Earth is connected to the cryosphere in one way or another. It’s therefore a shared responsibility to keep the majority of the frozen part of the world in tact before irrevocable changes alter the world as we know it. To share this message, the Norwegian Chairship of the Arctic Council brought some of the strongest voices on stage during COP29 to speak about the cryosphere. This is their call to action. The cryosphere is the frozen part of the world; its glaciers and mighty ice sheets, snow, permafrost, and river, lake and sea ice. While seemingly distant to many, these icy masses bind people across the globe together in many ways; mountain glaciers supply freshwater to millions. Ice sheets, snow and sea ice play a crucial role in stabilizing the Earth’s climate system while also serving as a basis for culture and well-being, supporting the livelihoods of Indigenous Peoples in particular. Permanently frozen soil protects rich carbon storages and the shores of coastal communities, and many ecosystems rely on snow and ice. However, our frozen world is under threat. As global temperatures increase, two of the most ice-rich regions are warming faster than the rest of the world: the Arctic three times1, and the Antarctic at twice the global average. The consequences of the shrinking ice sheets are global, including sea level rise, coastal erosion, contaminated freshwater, damaged infrastructure, a self-perpetuating warming cycle. These changes threaten not only the environment and the Earth’s climate systems, but also the rights of Arctic Indigenous Peoples, who have relied on a frozen landscape for time immemorial.