Study: Most Arctic sea ice could disappear by 2040
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: December 11, 2006, 1:43 PM PST
A new study says that the predictions that most of the ice in the Arctic
could disappear by 2060 was optimistic.
At AGU gathering, Marika Holland of the National Center for Atmospheric
Research suggests that Arctic sea ice could be completely melted within
25 years.
A paper from the National Center for Atmospheric Research predicts that
the erosion of the sea ice in the Arctic could begin to rapidly
accelerate starting in 2025. By 2040 or 2045, only a fairly small amount
of thinner ice could be left, said Marika Holland, lead author of the
paper.
"The ice is quite stable until 2025 and then, boom, it just
goes," Holland said Monday during a presentation at the fall
meeting of the American Geophysical Union taking place in San Francisco
this week.
The primary underlying cause of the disappearance of the sea ice, she
and other scientists said, is human-induced global warming. The Arctic
has been rapidly heating up, so much so that the Arctic environment of
today is substantially different from that of five years ago. By 2050,
human-induced global warming could cause average temperatures in the
region to rise by 3 degrees Celsius. That's the average among 12 studies
that try to predict future changes in the Arctic caused by human
activity.
Naturally induced global warming, however, will also play a role and
serve as a tipping point to lead to the permanent degradation of the
ice, Holland said. In other words, human-induced global warming
gradually thins the ice, and then natural global warming kicks it over
the edge.
The Arctic is already in trouble, said Mark Serreze, senior research
scientist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center and a professor at
the University of Colorado. Usually, the Arctic ice sheet shrinks until
September, when it starts to grow again. At the end of November, there
were 2 million fewer square kilometers of ice in the Arctic than normal,
he said.
"We are no longer recovering well in autumn anymore," he said.
"The effect of greenhouse gas-induced global warming is starting to
rear its ugly head."
The economic, political and ecological effects could well be
catastrophic, Serreze and others said at the conference. Greenland could
begin to rapidly calve off glaciers in the North Atlantic. Ocean water
levels around the world could rise 13 to 19 feet during the next several
centuries. As the ice disappears and the Arctic Ocean warms, more of the
microscopic plant life stays on the surface. Thus, bottom-feeders like
crab and shellfish die off. Pollock and salmon, however, would do
better. Sea lanes would open up above Russia and Canada.
Serreze joked that Russian colleagues tell him that global warming is
good for them. "But on the balance, there are more losers than
winners," he said.
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