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Ice is a lifeline for the world's coldest region

Innokenty Tobonov sinks his harpoon into a long block of ice while his helpers expertly push it out of freezing lake waters onto the snow-dusted surface before sliding it towards an idling tractor. After an hour of cutting ice blocks out of the lake in temperatures of minus 41 degrees Celsius (minus 42 Fahrenheit), cold vapour has frosted his eyelashes. But this is no excuse for a break as the group hurries to extract a winter's worth of frozen drinking water for an elderly neighbour. Yakutia, in northeastern Siberia, is Russia's largest region and experiences the planet's coldest temperatures.

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'Dependence on nature' - Sparsely populated Yakutia is popularly known as "the land of lakes" and has around one lake per each of its million residents. Rural communities are especially reliant on clean surface water. Any pollution goes directly into their drinking supply since village budgets cannot afford water filtering stations or wells deep enough to draw from below the permafrost layer.