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As Arctic sea ice hits annual maximum, concern grows over polar ice loss: Studies

sea ice along the Arctic Ocean from U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy

  • Arctic sea ice reaches its annual maximum extent in March. But while ice extent is high this year, scientists are far more concerned by the drastic loss of sea ice volume, which continues its steady decline.
  • A new study has documented drastic ice loss in both the north and south polar regions; scientists found that the single biggest reduction came from Arctic sea ice — the Earth lost 7.6 trillion metric tons of it in the last three decades.
  • Another new study shows that the last bastion of old, thick multiyear ice in the Arctic, north of Greenland and Ellesmere Island, is diminishing as the stability of the Nares ice arches declines — blockages which work like a cork in a bottle to stop multiyear ice from flowing out into the Atlantic.
  • Meanwhile, researchers warn about the urgent need for new Arctic monitoring satellites. Currently there is just one in operation, the DMSP-F18 satellite, and it has already been in orbit more than a decade. Its failure could leave researchers blind and disrupt an Arctic ice database continuous back to 1978.

On March 12,* sea ice floating atop the Arctic Ocean reached its greatest extent for the year, covering 14.750 million square kilometers (5.70 million square miles). With the exception of last winter, when sea ice reached just 15.047 million square kilometers (5.8 million square miles), sea ice extent in March 2021 was significantly above recent warm years which have put winter sea ice in jeopardy. This year ranks as the 7th lowest maximum extent since the satellite record began in 1978.

Last year was the hottest on record, and, accordingly, sea ice saw its second lowest extent at the September minimum. This winter might indicate a modest recovery — but there’s a caveat: winter maximums seem to have little correlation to summer minimums. And, moreover, the ice in the Arctic is thin.

“Volume keeps going down,” says Mark Serreze, director of the National Snow and Ice Data Center. “We’re still below average [extent] in the Bering Sea and around Svalbard [on the Arctic’s Atlantic Ocean side]. It’s pretty thin ice along the Labrador coast, too.” According to NSIDC data, September Arctic sea ice extent is decreasing at an average rate of 13.1% per decade.

The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Healy slices through thin Arctic sea ice. Image courtesy US Coast Guard.

Flying blind in February

Perhaps the bigger story this winter is a sudden blackout of U.S. ice data reporting and processing at the end of February, with two days’ worth of data unrecoverable. Every day, the NSIDC uploads sea ice extent figures to the ChArctic graph. The blackout occurred just as ice extent was beginning to dip around February 19, dropping to below 14.3 million square kilometers (5.52 million square miles), before growing again. Sea ice enthusiasts were in a panic.

“We had a data outage and it exposed a deficiency in our software,” explains Serreze. “It was a unique situation that the code wasn’t prepared for. That’s the challenge of doing data processing in near real-time.… If there’s a glitch like that you can get caught with your pants down.”

Arctic scientists weren’t too concerned about this brief blip, though NSIDC has previously warned about a much bigger worry: a potential lapse in continuous sea ice monitoring due to aging satellite infrastructure. The center relies on data from Department of Defense satellites. After the failure of a newer satellite launched in 2014, and the scrapping of another, the center has been left to rely only on the DMSP-F18 satellite, already in orbit for more than a decade. Its failure would disrupt a continuous Arctic sea ice record going back to 1978.

“We’re kind of limping along,” the NSIDC scientist says. “We’re in a vulnerable situation.” The Biden administration is aware of the problem, Serreze told Mongabay, though he’s unsure if it’s a high priority on a long federal to-do list.

Arctic sea ice break up. Image by Patrick Kelley / US Coast-Guard.

Global ice loss speeds up

In other news, both polar regions continue losing ice fast, with the biggest losses, thus far, occurring at sea. In a recent study published in The Cryosphere, University of Leeds researchers found that global ice loss had increased at a record rate, with the Earth losing 28 trillion metric tons of ice between 1994 and 2017. Of concern, the rate of such loss also sped up, from 0.8 trillion metric tons per year in the 1990s to 1.3 trillion metric tons per year in 2017. Scientists examined the ice extent and volume of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, mountain glaciers, Antarctic ice shelves, and Arctic and Antarctic sea ice. The single biggest loss came from Arctic sea ice; the Earth lost 7.6 trillion metric tons in the last three decades.

“Earth’s ice is extremely sensitive to changes in environment and once the delicate balance is upset a number of positive feedback mechanisms kick in that exacerbate the melting,” explains Isobel Lawrence, a research fellow at the Leeds’ Center for Polar Observation and Modelling. Under past circumstances, all that white sea ice would reflect solar radiation back into the atmosphere, maintaining cooler polar temperatures. With the sea ice gone, the dark ocean now absorbs that heat which exacerbates ocean and atmospheric warming.

A polar bear breaks a hole through thin Arctic sea ice. Image courtesy of the Canadian Coast Guard.

The Last Ice Area: Multiyear ice under assault

Even the oldest and thickest ice in the Arctic Ocean is at risk of disappearing. The Nares Strait lies between Ellesmere Island and Greenland, connecting northern Baffin Bay, an arm of the Atlantic Ocean with the Lincoln Sea in the Arctic Ocean. The Lincoln Sea is considered part of the Last Ice Area — the area where the Arctic’s thick, multiyear sea ice is expected to remain the longest.

Every December, ‘ice arches’ form in the northern or southern part of the Nares Strait. The arches are created when thick ice piles up in the narrow strait, essentially forming an icy traffic jam. These blockades cut off the export of sea ice from the Arctic Ocean out into Baffin Bay where it quickly melts. The annual Nares arches are also crucial for the formation of the North Water Polynya (at the northern mouth of Baffin Bay) which acts as a productive foraging ground for Arctic species like belugas, narwhals, and polar bears.

When researchers recently assessed the stability of these ice arches, they found a troubling trend.

In a Nature Communications study published in January, scientists determined that the average duration of these arches is decreasing about a week every year. Today, the Nares arches are in place about 100 fewer days than they were two decades ago.

As a result, the transport of old, thick multiyear ice out of the Nares Strait doubled from around 42,000 square kilometers (16,216 square miles) of ice annually in the late 1990s, to 86,000 square kilometers (33,204 square miles) today. During the winter of 2007, one of the worst ice extent years, neither the northern or southern arch formed. And in 2019, the northern ice arch broke up in late March — about four months ahead of past schedules. Arctic ice watchers are now closely watching to see what happens in 2021.

Sea ice in the Nares Strait between northern Greenland and Ellesmere Island, Canada, photographed during the Ryder 2019 Expedition. Image by Thomas M. Cronin / USGS.

Even by 2050, when much of the Arctic Ocean is expected to be ice-free in summer, Arctic scientists believe that ice will persist in the area around the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.

People “make a big deal about this Last Ice Area because it will act as a refuge for ice-dependent species,” says Kent Moore, lead author of the study and an atmospheric physicist at the University of Toronto. “The arches and the fact they’re less stable is another indication that this Last Ice Area may not be stable as people think…. It may not last as long as we hope it will last. That’s a big concern because we’re banking on it to be a refuge.”

Update: Arctic sea ice extent, which appeared to have peaked for the winter of 2020-21 on March 12, has surprised experts by declining for nearly a week, then surging upward again to a higher peak as of March 21. That’s not necessarily good news for the sea ice, as it appears that very thin ice is spreading out into warmer waters on the Arctic’s Atlantic side, so while extent is rising currently, there could also be a steep downturn within a short time.

Citations:

Moore, G.W.K., Howell, S.E.L., Brady, M. et al. Anomalous collapses of Nares Strait ice arches leads to enhanced export of Arctic sea ice. Nat Commun 12, 1 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-20314-w

Slater, T., Lawrence, I. R., Otosaka, I. N., Shepherd, A., Gourmelen, N., Jakob, L., Tepes, P., Gilbert, L., and Nienow, P.: Review article: Earth’s ice imbalance, The Cryosphere, 15, 233–246, https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-15-233-2021, 2021.

Banner image: Sea ice break up in the Chukchi Sea off the Arctic coast of northern Alaska. Image by Jannelle Trowbridge / USGS.

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