Arctic Sea Ice in Free Fall
Emily E. Adams and Janet Larsen
The North Pole is losing its ice cap. Comparing recent melt seasons
with historical records spanning more than 1,400 years shows summer
Arctic sea ice in free fall. Many scientists believe that the
Arctic Ocean will be ice-free in the summertime within the next decade
or two, and some say that this could occur as early as 2016. The
last time the Arctic was completely free of ice may have been 125,000
years ago.

Between March 20 and September 16, 2012, the Arctic lost ice covering
11.8 million square kilometers—an area larger than the United States and
Mexico together, and more than in any year since satellite measurements
began in 1979. At its lowest point, Arctic sea ice coverage
dropped to 3.4 million square kilometers, just half the average minimum
between 1979 and 2000. The 2012 minimum was 18 percent smaller
than the previous record low of 2007, a drop akin to beating the world
marathon record by more than 20 minutes—an extraordinary feat.

The Arctic currently undergoes an annual melt and freeze cycle, which
begins in the spring when the North Pole tilts toward the sun, warming
the Arctic air and water and melting sea ice and glaciers. As the sun
sets over the region in the fall, the sea ice expands, continuing to
thicken during the dark winter. Wind circulation patterns and storms
affect exactly how much ice melts and freezes in a given year, but as
temperatures have been rising over the last few decades, ice coverage in
the Arctic has begun a marked decline, and in recent years the shrinkage
has accelerated.

The melting of the Arctic ice cap exposes dark ocean water, which
absorbs more of the sun’s energy than the reflective ice, raising
regional temperatures. This in turn accelerates the ice melt and
makes it more difficult for new ice to form. In these warmer conditions,
the ice that does return during the winter does not grow as thick and is
more prone to melting when summer returns. Throughout the 1980s, close
to half of the winter ice had survived one or more melt seasons. But by
the start of the 2012 melt season, only a quarter of the remaining ice
was more than a year old. Because of the dramatic thinning, the
total volume of sea ice is shrinking even faster than its area. In just
the past 5 years the minimum volume of ice in the Arctic was slashed in
half.

An ice-free Arctic could alter weather patterns around the globe.
Furthermore, while the melting of floating sea ice does not directly
affect sea level, the extra heat in the region is accelerating the
melting of the Greenland ice sheet, a massive body of ice 3 kilometers
thick. If Greenland were to lose all of its ice, sea level would
go up by 7 meters. While that would not happen overnight,
even a 1 meter rise in sea level, which we could easily see this
century, would have