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Arctic Sea Ice Cover Sets New Record for Lowest Maximum Extent in at Least 38 Years

NSIDC

It’s been a chilly winter here in the Interior and elsewhere around the state. But for the Arctic Ocean, it’s been one long warm spell. That’s led to another record-low year for formation of Arctic winter sea-ice cover.

Experts with the National Snow and Ice Data Center say formation of sea ice around the Arctic Ocean probably petered out about two weeks ago. On Wednesday, they finally declared that the extent of sea-ice cover on the Arctic Ocean has grown as much as it’s going to this year.

“What we have now is what we call the lowest maximum on record,” says Mark Serreze, a senior research scientist with the Snow and Ice Data Center. He says well-above-average warmth over the Arctic Ocean since fall has led to well-below-average sea-ice formation. So much so that the center declared this year’s Arctic sea-ice maximum extent was the lowest in 38 years, since satellite monitoring began.

“Part of what’s going on is it was so darn warm this winter over the Arctic Ocean, especially out on the Atlantic side,” Serreze said.

Center officials say the sea ice probably reached its maximum extent on March 7th, when it covered about 5-and-a-half-million square miles of the Arctic Ocean, including portions of the Bering Sea that lie south of the Arctic Circle. That’s about 470,000 square miles less than the 38-year average. And it’s about 37,000 square miles less than the 2015 maximum extent, the previous record-setting low. 2016 set the third-lowest maximum extent on record.

“This is the third year we’ve seen these extreme low values of sea ice,” Serreze said.

The center says it’s been a warm fall and winter for the Arctic Ocean, with temperatures averaging 4-and-a-half-degrees Fahrenheit above the norm. The air over the Chukchi Sea northwest of Alaska and the Barents Sea north of Scandinavia was even warmer, averaging around 9 degrees above the norm.

Credit NSIDC courtesy NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
This plot shows Arctic air temperature differences at about 2,500 feet above sea level in degrees Celsius from Oct. 1 to Feb. 28. Yellows and reds indicate temperatures higher than the 1981 to 2010 average; blues and purples indicate temperatures lower than the '81 to '10 average.

“And so that prevented sea ice from growing, in part. And it’s looks like we’ve probably got a lot of very thin ice about there,” Serreze said. Arctic sea ice is already beginning to melt and recede, setting the stage for a very low sea-ice minimum extent that the center will declare in September, he added.

“So we’re starting the melt season in a deep hole right now,” he said. “And we’ll see how things work out this spring and summer, but I’m expecting we’re going to have a very, very low September extent.”

Serreze says seasonal weather conditions around the Arctic will determine whether the minimum sea-ice extent will set another record. He says the minimum is the more important and telling metric: “That’s the one that really matters in the end. And what we’re seeing is that September extent is going down quite quickly right now.”

Serreze says the polar ice cap won’t last long if the region continues to warm at this rate.

“We are on course sometime in the next few decades, maybe even earlier, to have summers in the Arctic where, you go up there at the end of August, say, and there’s no ice at all.”

He says that means, aside from some scattered icebergs and clusters of pack ice, the view from space in the fall of, say, 2040, will be of a blue Arctic Ocean.

Tim has worked in the news business for over three decades, mainly as a newspaper reporter and editor in southern Arizona. Tim first came to Alaska with his family in 1967, and grew up in Delta Junction before emigrating to the Lower 48 in 1977 to get a college education and see the world.