Now the world has something else to grip about when it comes to Russia - the weather.
A  string of volcanoes on Russia's eastern seaboard of Kamchatka have been  unusually active for the last six months. The dust they threw up  diverted winds in the Arctic, pushing cold air over Europe and North  America and causing the unusually cold winter this year, say scientists.
The  volcanoes (160 in total, of which 29 are active) are still on the go  and could create more problems this year, depressing harvests around the  world just as global food prices soar and culminating in a second  freezing winter next Christmas.
The  eruptions have come at the worst possible time. The Pacific Ocean has  already been cooled by the so-called La Nina - which contributed to the  deluge in Australia and Tropical Cyclones - while at the same time the  Atlantic Ocean is warmer than usual, say climatologists. Erste Bank says  the combination of this means the weather forecast for the first  quarter of this year is extreme, which will hit both the agricultural  and mining sectors, sending already spiking prices up even faster.  "These climatic conditions reduce the outlooks of harvest for  agricultural commodities (last year was also bad) and prevent the mining  of commodities like coal," says Erste. "The extreme weather will  probably culminate in the [first quarter] - this is the reason why the  prices of commodities will be influenced by this weather... then an  acceleration of consumer inflation... There are also problems for  transport due to strong storms."
The  combination shifts wind patterns around the world, but the spanner in  the works has been the Kamchatka volcanoes, which are throwing massive  amounts of dust into the air, causing the Arctic to become even colder  and Arctic winds to push farther south, resulting in a very drastic  change in patterns. "Kamchatka tends to be somewhat active - but  recently it has been ridiculous! Since late November, Kizimen,  Sheveluch, Karymsky, and Kliuchevskoi have been erupting almost  constantly," Evelyn Browning Garriss writes in the Browning Newsletter, a  monthly weather publication.
Volcanic  ash screens out the sun, cooling the air below. This lowers air  pressures, which in turn changes wind patterns, especially in the  Arctic. The upshot is, Browning Garriss says, "the cold air normally  trapped around the North Pole surges south."
This  has caused some bizarre weather. The UK was colder than Russia on  Christmas Day, while New York was buried under heavy snow.
The  cold weather has already impacted agriculture. Australia's wheat crop  was down by 10% in December - the worst fall in 100 years - and Russia's  agriculture ministry is forecasting a grain harvest of 80m-85m tonnes;  better than last year, but still well down on the bumper 2008 crop of  110m tonnes. Coupled with last season's severe drought in Argentina,  floods in Brazil and Venezuela, odd weather in the agricultural parts of  China, and food prices have already soared.
What  happens throughout the rest of this year will depend entirely on the  volcanic activity, reckons Browning Garriss, which by its nature is  impossible to predict. 
Watch actual activity:http://www.avo.alaska.edu/activity/ 


 
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