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(2009) September sea-ice cover in the Arctic Ocean projected to vanish by 2100

Authors
Boe J.
Source
Nature Geosciences (56)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
341-343
Journal Number
2
Notes

Abstract

The Arctic climate is changing rapidly. From 1979 to 2006, September sea-ice extent decreased by almost 25% or about 100,000 km2 per year (ref. 2). In September 2007, Arctic sea-ice extent reached its lowest level since satellite observations began and in September 2008, sea-ice cover was still low. This development has raised concerns that the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free in late summer in only a few decades, with important economic and geopolitical implications. Unfortunately, most current climate models underestimate significantly the observed trend in Arctic sea-ice decline, leading to doubts regarding their projections for the timing of ice-free conditions. Here we analyse the simulated trends in past sea-ice cover in 18 state-of-art-climate models and find a direct relationship between the simulated evolution of September sea-ice cover over the twenty-first century and the magnitude of past trends in sea-ice cover. Using this relationship together with observed trends, we project the evolution of September sea-ice cover over the twenty-first century. We find that under a scenario with medium future greenhouse-gas emissions, the Arctic Ocean will probably be ice-free in September before the end of the twenty-first century.

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Folder Categories
Cryosphere Dynamics Ice Sheets and Sea Ice Tundra / Arctic
 
Tag_blue Keywords
Arctic sea ice projections
 
 
Map Regions
Arctic
 

Entered by: Shaan Sahonta, 7/2010

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