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Ukraine war
WorldRussia & Central Asia

Without Russia, harder to tackle climate change and other problems, say scientists

  • How to document warming in the Arctic without Russia? Maintain a Mars rover? Continue fusion-power reactor in France for carbon-free energy?
  • ‘We are going to lose things’; Putin’s invasion causing decay of relationships, projects binding Moscow and West together

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The remains of a dead tree at an almost empty reservoir in Spain during a 2018 drought. File photo: Reuters
Associated Press

Without Russian help, climate scientists worry how they’ll keep up their important work of documenting warming in the Arctic.

Europe’s space agency is wrestling with how its planned Mars rover might survive freezing nights on the Red Planet without its Russian heating unit.

And what of the world’s quest for carbon-free energy if 35 nations cooperating on an experimental fusion-power reactor in France cannot ship vital components from Russia?

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In scientific fields with profound implications for mankind’s future and knowledge, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war in Ukraine is causing a swift and broad decaying of relationships and projects that bound together Moscow and the West.

A protester against the Russian war in Ukraine, in Berlin, Germany on Sunday. Photo: dpa
A protester against the Russian war in Ukraine, in Berlin, Germany on Sunday. Photo: dpa

Post-Cold War bridge-building through science is unravelling as Western nations seek to punish and isolate the Kremlin by drying up support for scientific programmes involving Russia.

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