Ice
withdrawal 'shatters record'
Arctic
sea ice shrank to the smallest area on record this year, US scientists have confirmed.
The
National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) said the minimum extent of 4.13 million
sq km (1.59 million sq miles) was reached on 16 September.
The
figure shatters all previous satellite surveys, including the previous record
low of 5.32 million sq km measured in 2005.
Earlier
this month, it was reported that the Northwest Passage was open.
The
fabled Arctic shipping route from the Atlantic to the Pacific is normally ice-bound
at some location throughout the year; but this year, ships have been able to complete
an unimpeded navigation.
'Fast
track'
Arctic
sea ice loses area in summer months and regrows in the winter cold.
The
researchers at NSIDC judge the ice extent on a five-day mean. The minimum for
2007 falls below the minimum set on 20-21 September 2005 by an area roughly the
size of Texas and California combined, or nearly five UKs.
Speaking
to BBC News on Monday this week, Mark Serreze, a senior research scientist at
the NSIDC, said: "2005 was the previous record and what happened then had
really astounded us; we had never seen anything like that, having so little sea
ice at the end of summer. Then along comes 2007 and it has completely shattered
that old record."
He
added: "We're on a strong spiral of decline; some would say a death spiral.
I wouldn't go that far but we're certainly on a fast track. We know there is natural
variability but the magnitude of change is too great to be caused by natural variability
alone."
The
team will now follow the progress of recovery over the winter months.
Modelled
decline
In
December 2006, a study by US researchers forecast that the Arctic could be ice-free
in summers by 2040.
A
team of scientists from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), the
University of Washington, and McGill University, found that "positive feedbacks"
were likely to accelerate the decline of the region's ice system.
Sea
ice has a bright surface which reflects 80% of the sunlight that strikes it back
into space. However, as the ice melts during the summer, more of the dark ocean
surface becomes exposed.
Rather
than reflecting sunlight, the ocean absorbs 90% of it, causing the waters to warm
and increase the rate of melting.
Scientists
fear that this feedback mechanism will have major consequences for wildlife in
the region, not least polar bears, which traverse ice floes in search of food.
On
a global scale, the Earth would lose a major reflective surface and so absorb
more solar energy, potentially accelerating climatic change across the world.
In
contrast to the Arctic, the extent of sea ice in the Antarctic has come close
this year to breaking its satellite-monitored record for maximum area of 16.03
million sq km.