
Arctic sea ice receded to the second-lowest extent on record this year. MAP COURTESY NATIONAL SNOW AND ICE DATA CENTER.
Researchers say shrinking ice is well outside the range of natural climate variability
By Summit Voice
SUMMIT COUNTY — Scientists measuring the blanket of sea ice that floats on the Arctic Ocean say this year’s melt has ended, with the extent of the ice reaching its second-lowest level on record, dating back to 1979.
This year’s minimum of 1.67 million square miles is more than 1 million square miles below the 1979-2000 monthly average extent for September — an area larger than Texas and California combined.
The last five years have been the five lowest Arctic sea ice extents recorded since satellite measurements began in 1979, said CU-Boulder’s Walt Meier, an NSIDC scientist.
“The primary driver of these low sea ice conditions is rising temperatures in the Arctic, and we definitely are heading in the direction of ice-free summers,” Meier said. “Our best estimates now indicate that may occur by about 2030 or 2040.”
While this year’s September minimum extent was greater than the all-time low in 2007, it remains significantly below the long-term average and well outside the range of natural climate variability, according to scientists involved in the analysis. Most scientists believe the shrinking Arctic sea ice is tied to warming temperatures caused by an increase in human-produced greenhouse gases pumped into Earth’s atmosphere.
“Every summer that we see a very low ice extent in September sets us up for a similar situation the following year,” said NSIDC Director Mark Serreze, also a professor in CU-Boulder’s geography department. “The Arctic sea ice cover is so thin now compared to 30 years ago that it just can’t take a hit anymore. This overall pattern of thinning ice in the Arctic in recent decades is really starting to catch up with us.”
Serreze said that in 2007, the year of record low Arctic sea ice, there was a “nearly perfect” set-up of specific weather conditions. Winds pushed in more warm air over the Arctic than usual, helping to melt sea ice, and winds also pushed the floating ice chunks together into a smaller area. “It is interesting that this year, the second lowest sea ice extent ever recorded, that we didn’t see that kind of weather pattern at all,” he said.
Filed under: climate and weather, Environment, global warming, Summit County news Tagged: | Arctic sea ice extent, climate, Environment, global warming, Summit County News
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“Nearly perfect” set-up of specific weather conditions. Warm air pushed over the Arctic. That also means that the “warm air” also must have traveled over the frozen tundra as well, which releases more methane that’s trapped inside it as it too is warmed. 21st Century mindsets have to prevail over 20th Century think. That’s what is great about all the advances of scientific instruments, research, as well as the many disciplines piling up information.