No More Arctic Ice this year - possibility says US Navy Scientist
June 27, ABCNews - Experts Worry About a Disturbing Trend at the North Pole and the very real possibility of its first Ice-Free Summer
The distinct possibility that this summer -- for the first time in
recorded history -- the North pole could be free of sea ice, is now a
common subject of discussion among the world's climate experts.
The Arctic's thick, resilient multiyear sea ice (frozen sea surface),
which usually accumulates and lasts through the annual melting season,
has started to give way to thinner, vulnerable first-year ice.
Satellite data gathered by the University of Colorado's National Snow
and Ice Data Center showed that young sea ice, which is no more than
about 60 inches deep and much more susceptible to melting away, now
makes up 72 percent of the Arctic ice sheet. Using that estimate,
scientists at the center see a 50 percent chance that ice at the highest
point in the Arctic will melt by the summer's end.
Andy Mahoney, a center researcher, has pinpointed this year in
particular as having the "greatest chance" of being ice-free.
Such a scenario, however, will depend on the weather during the next
couple of months. "It will probably come down to how cloudy it is this
summer," Mahoney says. "If there's clear skies and if atmospheric
patterns resemble last year's, you're going to see a lot more melt."
Increased rates of Arctic melt have altered the region in unprecedented
ways. Arctic sea ice dwindled to a record low in September, clearing a
route through the fabled Northwest Passage that runs from Greenland to
Alaska. Opening of the path has provided ships a shorter, more direct
route between Asia and Europe.
"It's got a shock level for people because there's always ice at the
North Pole, but there are also real implications," Mahoney said. "If the
North Pole melted out, the shipping industry would be paying very close
attention to that."
Wieslaw Maslowski, who conducts Arctic ice research from his base at the
Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif., told ABC News last summer
that there was a chance that the Arctic's entire ice sheet could vanish
for the first time in just four or five years.
Such a statement was considered a daring projection at the time, given
that climate prediction models estimated a few years before that it
would take at least another 40 or 50 years before such a scenario is
likely to occur.
But now, Maslowski says that "whether the Arctic sea ice disappears for
the first time this summer or four or eight summers from now may be
beside the point."
"The point," he noted, "is that we may well be passing through the
sea-ice tipping point now. We'll just have to see what July and August
weather have in store for the ice this summer."
The disappearance of Arctic sea ice may mean an even hotter planet,
since the region's ice pack helps cool the earth by bouncing the sun's
rays back into outer space. This reflective property, known as albedo,
also prevents the rays from reaching the ocean, where heat is absorbed.
Less sea ice means more dark open water to absorb the heat, which melts
the sea ice even further.
"Losing the ice sheet means losing an important way of cooling down,"
Mahoney said. "As a result, global warming would accelerate as the ice
retreats."
By TUAN C. NGUYEN and BILL BLAKEMORE
Original Source: ABC News (USA)

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