Extract from ABC News
Last month saw the lowest extent of Antarctic sea ice on record for July, according to the European Union's satellite monitoring group.
Key points:
- Antarctic ice levels are seven per cent lower than average and the lowest ever for a July
- Satellites have been collating ice extent records for 44 years
- Arctic sea ice cover was four per cent lower than average
The Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) found Antarctic sea ice extent reached 1.53 million square kilometres — some 1.1 million km2, or seven per cent, below the 1991-2020 average for July.
This was the lowest ice cover for July since satellite records began 44 years ago, and followed record low Antarctic sea ice levels for June.
C3S said the low ice values continued a string of below-average monthly extents observed since February 2022.
The service said in its monthly bulletin the Southern Ocean saw "widespread areas of below-average sea ice concentration" last month.
Arctic sea ice cover meanwhile was four per cent lower than average, making it the 12th lowest July sea ice extent on record.
In a month that saw temperature records broken across parts of northern Europe and Britain, C3S said July was drier than average for much of Europe, noting a number of low-precipitation records in several locations.
"These conditions affected the economy locally and facilitated the spread and intensification of wildfires," it said.
C3S said July was also abnormally dry across much of North America, South America, Central Asia and Australia.
Climate change makes extreme heat and drought more likely to occur.
"We can expect to continue seeing more frequent and longer periods of extremely high temperatures, as global temperatures increase further," said senior C3S scientist Freja Vamborg.
The service said last month was wetter than usual in eastern Russia, northern China and in a large wet band spanning from eastern Africa across Asia to north west India.
AFP
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