Publication Date June 7, 2023 | Climate Nexus Hot News

Study Finds Arctic Will Be Ice-Free In Summer By 2030s

The Kvitbjorn (Polar Bear, in Norwegian) boat as it makes its way in the sea ice in the Borebukta Bay, located at the northwestern side of Isfjorden, in Svalbard Archipelago, northern Norway. (Credit: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images)
The Kvitbjorn (Polar Bear, in Norwegian) boat as it makes its way in the sea ice in the Borebukta Bay, located at the northwestern side of Isfjorden, in Svalbard Archipelago, northern Norway. (Credit: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images)

The study finds that sea ice loss in the Arctic is very clearly occurring as a result of climate pollution and not due to natural variability. Additionally, it shows that even under a scenario, the Arctic will still be “practically” ice-free in September by the middle of this century. “We are very quickly about to lose the Arctic summer sea-ice cover, basically independent of what we are doing,” Dirk Notz, study author and a climate scientist at the University of Hamburg in Germany told the New York Times. “We’ve been waiting too long now to do something about climate change to still protect the remaining ice.” Sea ice is critical to prevent global warming because it reflects solar radiation back into space. As sea ice declines, the Arctic will warm even faster, driving sea level rise and the associated impacts. The Arctic has already been warming four times more than the global average over the past forty years. (The HillBloomberg $, New York Times $)

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