Massive surge in disappearance of Arctic sea ice sparks global warning
Arctic meltdown is speeding up... sea ice is vanishing faster than
ever before... polar bears face extinction... and America's top climate
scientist warns we only have a decade to save the planet
By Michael McCarthy and David Usborne
The Independent
Friday, 15 September 2006
The melting of the sea ice in the Arctic, the clearest sign so far of
global warming, has taken a sudden and enormous leap forward, in one of
the most ominous developments yet in the onset of climate change.
Two separate studies by Nasa, using different satellite monitoring
technologies, both show a great surge in the disappearance of Arctic ice
cover in the last two years.
One, from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, shows that Arctic
perennial sea ice, which normally survives the summer melt season and
remains year-round, shrank by 14 per cent in just 12 months between 2004
and 2005.
The overall decrease in the ice cover was 720,000 sq km (280,000 sq
miles) - an area almost the size of Turkey, gone in a single year.
The other study, from the Goddard Space Flight Centre, in Maryland,
shows that the perennial ice melting rate, which has averaged 0.15 per
cent a year since satellite observations began in 1979, has suddenly
accelerated hugely. In the past two winters the rate has increased to
six per cent a year - that is, it has got more than 30 times faster.
The changes are alarming scientists and environmentalists, because they
far exceed the rate at which supercomputer models of climate change
predict the Arctic ice will melt under the influence of global warming -
which is rapid enough.
If climate change is not checked, the Arctic ice will all be gone by
2070, and people will be able to sail to the North Pole. But if these
new rates of melting are maintained, the Arctic ice will all be gone
decades before that.
The implications are colossal. It will mean extinction in the wild - in
the lifetime of children alive today - for one of the world's most
majestic creatures, the polar bear, which needs the ice to hunt seals.
It means the possibility of a lethal "feedback" mechanism
speeding up global warming, because the dark surface of the open Arctic
ocean will absorb the sun's heat, rather than reflect it as the ice
cover does now - and so the world will get even hotter.
But most of all, the new developments add to the growing concern that
climate change as a process is starting to happen much faster than
scientists considered it would, even five years ago when the UN's
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change published its last report.
"These are the latest in a long series of recent studies, all
telling us that climate change is faster and nastier than we
thought," said Tom Burke, a former government green adviser and now
a visiting professor at Imperial College London. "An abyss is
opening up between the speed at which the climate is changing and the
speed at which governments are responding.
"We must stop thinking that this is just another environmental
problem, to be dealt with when time and resources allow, and realise
that this is an increasingly urgent threat to our security and
prosperity."
Yesterday, Jim Hansen, the leading climatologist and director of the
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, in New York, issued a now-or-never
warning to governments around the world, including his own, telling them
they must take radical action to avert a planetary environmental
catastrophe. He said it was no longer viable for nations to adopt a
"business as usual" stance on fossil-fuel consumption.
"I think we have a very brief window of opportunity to deal with
climate change ... no longer than a decade, at the most," he said.
Early in his first term, President George Bush pulled the US out of the
Kyoto Treaty that is meant to bind nations to lower emissions of warming
gases. However, opinion in the US is starting to change, as evidenced by
the huge success of the documentary on climate change, An Inconvenient
Truth, narrated by the former US vice-president Senator Al Gore.
The two Nasa Arctic studies, released simultaneously, break fresh ground
in dealing with the perennial, or "multi-winter" ice, rather
than the "seasonal" ice at the edge of the icefield, which
melts every summer.
Concern about the melting rate has hitherto focused on the seasonal ice,
whose summer disappearance and retreat from the landmasses of Arctic
Canada and Siberia is increasingly obvious. In September 2005, it
retreated to the lowest level recorded. Such rapid shrinkage of the
perennial ice has not been shown before. "It is alarming,"
said Joey Camiso, who led the Goddard study. "We've witnessed sea
ice reduction at 6 per cent per year over just the last two winters,
most likely a result of warming due to greenhouse gases."
Dr Son Nghiem, who led the team which carried out the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory study, said that in previous years there had some variability
in the extent of perennial Arctic ice. "But it is much smaller and
regional," he said. "However, the change we see between 2004
and 2005 is enormous." Britain's Professor Julian Dowdeswell, the
director of the Scott Polar Research Institute in Cambridge, agreed the
changes shown in the American studies were "huge", adding:
"It remains to be seen whether the rate of change is maintained in
future years."
The melting of the Arctic ice will not itself contribute to global
sea-level rise, as the ice floating in the sea is already displacing its
own mass in the water. When the ice cube melts in your gin and tonic,
the liquid in your glass does not rise.
There are great volumes of land-based ice - the ice sheets of Greenland
and Antarctica, and mountain glaciers - which are subject to exactly the
same temperature rises as the Arctic ice, and which have also started to
melt. They will add to sea levels. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet would,
if it were to collapse, raise sea levels around the world by 16ft (5m),
submerging large parts of Bangladesh and Egypt - and London.
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