Extract from The Guardian
‘Tremendous loss’
of ice reinforces clear downward trend towards ice-free summers due
to effects of climate change
Arctic sea ice this summer shrank to its second
lowest level since scientists started to monitor it by satellite.
Photograph: AP
Associated
Press
Friday
16 September 2016 19.34 AEST
Arctic sea
ice this summer shrank to its second lowest level since scientists
started to monitor it by satellite, with scientists saying it is
another ominous signal of global warming.
The
National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado said the sea
ice reached
its summer low point on Saturday, extending 4.14m sq km
(1.6m sq miles). That’s behind only the
mark set in 2012, 3.39m sq km.
Center
director Mark Serreze said this year’s level technically was 10,000
sq km less than 2007, but that’s so close the two years are
essentially tied.
Even
though this year didn’t set a record, “we have reinforced the
overall downward trend. There is no evidence of recovery here,”
Serreze said. “We’ve always known that the Arctic is going to be
the early warning system for climate change. What we’ve seen this
year is reinforcing that.”
This
year’s minimum level is nearly 2.56m sq km smaller than the 1979 to
2000 average. That’s the size of Alaska and Texas combined.
“It’s
a tremendous loss that we’re looking at here,” Serreze said.
It
was an unusual year for sea ice in the Arctic, Serreze said. In the
winter, levels were among their lowest ever for the cold season, but
then there were more storms than usual over the Arctic during the
summer. Those storms normally keep the Arctic cloudy and cooler, but
that didn’t keep the sea ice from melting this year, he said.
“Summer
weather patterns don’t matter as much as they used to, so we’re
kind of entering a new regime,” Serreze said.
Serreze
said he wouldn’t be surprised if the Arctic was
essentially ice free in the summer by 2030, something that
will affect international security.
“The
trend is clear and ominous,” National Center for Atmospheric
Research senior scientist Kevin Trenberth said in an email. “This
is indeed why the polar bear is a poster child for human-induced
climate change, but the effects are not just in the Arctic.”
One
recent theory divides climate scientists: Melting sea ice in the
Arctic may change the jet stream and weather further south,
especially in winter.
“What
happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic,” Pennsylvania
State University climate scientist Michael Mann said. “It looks
increasingly likely that the dramatic decrease in Arctic sea ice is
impacting weather in mid-latitudes and may be at least partly
responsible for the more dramatic, persistent and damaging weather
anomalies we’ve seen so many of in recent years.”
Arctic
sea ice extent. The red line is sea ice extent in 2016. Photograph:
NSID
No comments:
Post a Comment