NOAA and its partners will release the 15th Arctic Report Card, with the latest scientific observations of climate change in the Arctic, a sensitive part of the world that impacts other parts of the planet, at a virtual news conference on Tue., Dec. 8, at 11:00 a.m. ET, during the American Geophysical Union’s fall meeting.
![NOAA's 15th Arctic Report Card (2020) continues to chart the transition of a once-reliably frozen into a warmer, wetter, biologically transformed world. Photo: Aerial view of Sheenjek River in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge posted on Facebook June 15, 2020. (Image credit: A. Bonogofsky/USFWS) NOAA's 15th Arctic Report Card (2020) continues to chart the transition of a once-reliably frozen into a warmer, wetter, biologically transformed world. Photo: Aerial view of Sheenjek River in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge posted on Facebook June 15, 2020.](/sites/default/files/styles/landscape_width_1275/public/legacy/image/2020/Dec/PHOTO%20-%20arctic%20reserve%20-%20USFWS%20-%20120420%20-%201960x935%20%3D%20LANDSCAPE.jpg?itok=LmjzFiTs)
NOAA's 15th Arctic Report Card (2020) continues to chart the transition of a once-reliably frozen into a warmer, wetter, biologically transformed world. Photo: Aerial view of Sheenjek River in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge posted on Facebook June 15, 2020. (Image credit: A. Bonogofsky/USFWS)