Record
is widely seen by scientists as strong signal of long-term climate warming
Satellite
image of Arctic sea ice. Photograph: Reuters
The
Arctic sea ice has hit its lowest extent ever recorded, according to the
US-basedNational Snow and Ice Data Center(NSIDC),
the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, and Norwegian, Danish and other
government monitoring organisations.
With
possibly two weeks' further melt likely before the ice reaches its minimum
extent and starts to refreeze ahead of the winter, satellites showed it had
shrunk to 4.1m sq km (1.6m sq miles) on Sunday. The previous record was of 4.3m
sq km
NSIDC
scientist Walt Meier said: "This is an indication that the Arctic sea ice
cover is fundamentally changing."
"The
previous record, set in 2007, occurred because of near perfect summer weather
for melting ice. Apart from one big storm in early August, weather patterns
this year were unremarkable. The ice is so thin and weak now, it doesn't matter
how the winds blow," said the NSIDC director, Mark Serreze.
The
record is widely seen by scientists at the NSIDC and elsewhere as a strong
signal of long-term climate warming.
"The
Arctic used to be dominated by multiyear ice, or ice that stayed around for
several years," Meier said. "Now it's becoming more of a seasonal ice
cover and large areas are now prone to melting out in summer," said
Serreze.
"These
figures are not the result of some freak of nature but the effects of man-made
global warming caused by our reliance on dirty fossil fuels," said John
Sauven, the Greenpeace UK director.
"These
preliminary figures provide irrefutable evidence that greenhouse gas emissions
leading to global warming are damaging one of the planet's critical
environments, one that helps maintain the stability of the global climate for
every citizen of the world," said Sauven.
Arctic
sea ice follows an annual cycle of melting through the warm summer months and
refreezing in the winter. It has shown a dramatic overall decline over the past
30 years.
"Record-breaking
ice minimums are becoming the new normal," says Clive Tesar of WWF's
global Arctic programme. "We're breaking records on a regular basis as the
sea ice continues its decline."
According
to many scientists, the sea ice plays a critical role in regulating climate,
acting as a giant mirror that reflects much of the sun's energy, helping to
cool the Earth.
The
formation of the sea ice produces dense saltwater, which sinks, helping drive
the deep ocean currents. Without the ice, many scientists fear this balance
could be upset, potentially causing major climatic changes.
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