Remember the environmental movement from the 60's & 70's? We
weren't kidding, too bad you didn't listen....
Current computer models suggest
that the Arctic will be entirely ice-free during summer by the year 2070 but
some scientists now believe that even this dire prediction may be
over-optimistic, said Professor Peter Wadhams, an Arctic ice specialist at
Cambridge University.
I'd like to officially be the first person to
say, in regards to this story, "I TOLD YOU SO!" So there. -Ed
Global warming 'past the
point of no return'
By Steve Connor, Science
Editor
Published: 16 September
2005
A record loss of sea ice in the Arctic
this summer has convinced scientists that the northern hemisphere may have
crossed a critical threshold beyond which the climate may never recover.
Scientists fear that the Arctic has now entered an irreversible phase of warming
which will accelerate the loss of the polar sea ice that has helped to keep the
climate stable for thousands of years.
They believe global warming is melting
Arctic ice so rapidly that the region is beginning to absorb more heat from the
sun, causing the ice to melt still further and so reinforcing a vicious cycle of
melting and heating.
The greatest fear is that the Arctic
has reached a "tipping point" beyond which nothing can reverse the continual
loss of sea ice and with it the massive land glaciers of Greenland, which will
raise sea levels dramatically.
Satellites monitoring the Arctic have
found that the extent of the sea ice this August has reached its lowest monthly
point on record, dipping an unprecedented 18.2 per cent below the long-term
average.
Experts believe that such a loss of
Arctic sea ice in summer has not occurred in hundreds and possibly thousands of
years. It is the fourth year in a row that the sea ice in August has fallen
below the monthly downward trend - a clear sign that melting has
accelerated.
Scientists are now preparing to report
a record loss of Arctic sea ice for September, when the surface area covered by
the ice traditionally reaches its minimum extent at the end of the summer
melting period.
Sea ice naturally melts in summer and
reforms in winter but for the first time on record this annual rebound did not
occur last winter when the ice of the Arctic failed to recover
significantly.
Arctic specialists at the US National
Snow and Ice Data Centre at Colorado University, who have documented the gradual
loss of polar sea ice since 1978, believe that a more dramatic melt began about
four years ago.
In September 2002 the sea ice coverage
of the Arctic reached its lowest level in recorded history. Such lows have
normally been followed the next year by a rebound to more normal levels, but
this did not occur in the summers of either 2003 or 2004. This summer has been
even worse. The surface area covered by sea ice was at a record monthly minimum
for each of the summer months - June, July and now August.
Scientists analysing the latest
satellite data for September - the traditional minimum extent for each summer -
are preparing to announce a significant shift in the stability of the Arctic sea
ice, the northern hemisphere's major "heat sink" that moderates climatic
extremes.
"The changes we've seen in the Arctic
over the past few decades are nothing short of remarkable," said Mark Serreze,
one of the scientists at the Snow and Ice Data Centre who monitor Arctic sea
ice.
Scientists at the data centre are
bracing themselves for the 2005 annual minimum, which is expected to be reached
in mid-September, when another record loss is forecast. A major announcement is
scheduled for 20 September. "It looks like we're going to exceed it or be real
close one way or the other. It is probably going to be at least as comparable to
September 2002," Dr Serreze said.
"This will be four Septembers in a row
that we've seen a downward trend. The feeling is we are reaching a tipping point
or threshold beyond which sea ice will not recover."
The extent of the sea ice in September
is the most valuable indicator of its health. This year's record melt means that
more of the long-term ice formed over many winters - so called multi-year ice -
has disappeared than at any time in recorded history.
Sea ice floats on the surface of the
Arctic Ocean and its neighbouring seas and normally covers an area of some 7
million square kilometres (2.4 million square miles) during September - about
the size of Australia. However, in September 2002, this dwindled to about 2
million square miles - 16 per cent below average.
Sea ice data for August closely
mirrors that for September and last month's record low - 18.2 per cent below the
monthly average - strongly suggests that this September will see the smallest
coverage of Arctic sea ice ever recorded.
As more and more sea ice is lost
during the summer, greater expanses of open ocean are exposed to the sun which
increases the rate at which heat is absorbed in the Arctic region, Dr Serreze
said.
Sea ice reflects up to 80 per cent of
sunlight hitting it but this "albedo effect" is mostly lost when the sea is
uncovered. "We've exposed all this dark ocean to the sun's heat so that the
overall heat content increases," he explained.
Current computer models suggest that
the Arctic will be entirely ice-free during summer by the year 2070 but some
scientists now believe that even this dire prediction may be over-optimistic,
said Professor Peter Wadhams, an Arctic ice specialist at Cambridge
University.
"When the ice becomes so thin it
breaks up mechanically rather than thermodynamically. So these predictions may
well be on the over-optimistic side," he said.
As the sea ice melts, and more of the
sun's energy is absorbed by the exposed ocean, a positive feedback is created
leading to the loss of yet more ice, Professor Wadhams said.
"If anything we may be underestimating
the dangers. The computer models may not take into account collaborative
positive feedback," he said.
Sea ice keeps a cap on frigid water,
keeping it cold and protecting it from heating up. Losing the sea ice of the
Arctic is likely to have major repercussions for the climate, he said. "There
could be dramatic changes to the climate of the northern region due to the
creation of a vast expanse of open water where there was once effectively land,"
Professor Wadhams said. "You're essentially changing land into ocean and the
creation of a huge area of open ocean where there was once land will have a very
big impact on other climate parameters," he said.
Posted: Sat
- September 17, 2005 at 02:20 AM