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North Pole May Be Ice Free for First Time This Summer
Friday, June 20, 2008
(National Geographic)Aalok Mehta aboard the C.C.G.S. Amundsen
National Geographic News
June 20, 2008
Arctic warming has become so dramatic that the
North Pole may melt this summer, report
scientists studying the effects of climate
change in the field.
"We're actually projecting this year that the
North Pole may be free of ice for the first
time [in history]," David Barber, of the
University of Manitoba, told National
Geographic News aboard the C.C.G.S. Amundsen, a
Canadian research icebreaker.
Firsthand observations and satellite images
show that the immediate area around the
geographic North Pole is now mostly annual, or
first-year, ice—thin new ice that forms each
year during the winter freeze.
Such ice is much more prone to melting during
the summer months than perennial, or multiyear,
ice, which is thick and dense ice that has
lasted through multiple cycles of thawing and
refreezing.
"I would say the ice in the vicinity of the
North Pole is primed for melting, and an
ice-free North Pole is a good possibility,"
Sheldon Drobot, a climatologist at the Colorado
Center for Astrodynamics Research at the
University of Colorado, said by email.
The melt would be mostly symbolic—thicker ice,
pushed against the Canadian continental shelf
by weather and Earth's rotation, would still
survive the summer.
Recent models suggest that the Arctic won't see
its first completely ice-free summer until
somewhere between 2013 and 2030.
But this summer's forecast—and unusual early
melting events all around the Arctic—serve as a
dire warning of how quickly the polar regions
are being affected by climate change.
Massive Melt
Scientists are particularly interested in the
North and South Poles because they are expected
to show the most dramatic effects of global
warming.
Models predict that the regions will see
temperature increases roughly three times as
quickly as the rest of the globe because of an
effect known as ice albedo feedback, which
occurs when highly reflective ice gives way to
dark water.
The water absorbs much more of the sun's
energy, increasing temperatures and causing
further ice melting.
That has been reflected in the satellite
record, which shows a gradual decrease in the
extent of Arctic ice coverage over the years.
But the North Pole's current plight stems from
a much more startling reduction in sea ice that
took place last summer. That extensive melt
shattered all previous records and destroyed a
significant portion of the Arctic's multiyear
ice.
"We lost 65 percent of the ice cover in the
Northern Hemisphere all in one year," Barber
said. "So it was a whopping decrease. We didn't
even think it was possible for the system to
lose so much ice all at once."
Scientists say the record loss last year was
due to a combination of warm ocean currents,
fluke winds, and unusually sunny weather. (See:
"Warming Oceans Contributed to Record Arctic
Melt" [December 14, 2007].)
It's unlikely that such a mixture of conditions
will occur again, University of Colorado's
Drobot said.
But forecasts for this summer's ice suggest the
damage has already been done.
An unusually cold winter had raised hopes for a
recovery, but much of the ice that formed froze
later than usual, ending up so thin that it has
already started to break up.
"Endangered Species"
Scientists are hesitant, however, to offer a
definitive prediction specifically about the
North Pole, since that is dependent on weather
conditions that are highly erratic.
"Nobody knows for sure," Ron Lindsay, of the
University of Washington, Seattle's Polar
Science Center, said by email.
"While much of the first-year ice melts in the
summer, not all of it does, so we can't be sure
it will melt at the Pole," he said. "We also
don't know what the winds will be like this
summer, and they play an important role in
determining just what parts of the Arctic Ocean
are ice-free."
But given the rapid changes now evident in the
Arctic, the ultimate fate of the North Pole—in
fact, all permanent ice in the Arctic—may be
all but assured. Almost all models have the
Arctic completely ice free in the summer by
2100.
"We jokingly call [perennial ice] an endangered
species," Barber said. "It's on its way out.
And so we're studying it as quickly as we can,
because there isn't going to be any of it left
pretty soon."