This year’s sea ice minimum is 20 percent lower than the average over the last 40 years, researchers say.
Sea ice in the Antarctic region fell to a record low this year as a result of rising global temperatures and there is no quick fix to reverse the damage done, according to a new study.
The continent’s minimum summer ice cover – which last year dipped below 2 million square kilometres (772,000 square miles) for the first time since satellite monitoring began in 1978 – fell further to a new low in February, according to research published in the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science.
“It’s going to take decades if not centuries for these things to recover. There’s no quick fix to replacing this ice,” said Caroline Holmes, polar climate scientist at the British Antarctic Survey and one of the study’s co-authors.
“It will certainly take a long time, even if it’s possible,” she said at a briefing with journalists.
This year’s sea ice minimum is 20 percent lower than the average over the last 40 years, equivalent to a sea ice loss nearly 10 times the area of New Zealand, said Tim Naish, director of the Antarctic Research Centre at New Zealand’s Victoria University of Wellington, who was not a participant in the study.
“In some cases, we are getting close to tipping points, which once crossed will lead to irreversible changes with unstoppable consequences for future generations,” Naish said.
Global warming driven by the burning of fossil fuels has made Antarctica more vulnerable to extreme events and the impact is “virtually certain” to get worse, the study said.
Climate change will “lead to increases in the size and frequency” of heatwaves, ice shelf collapses and declines in sea ice, it said, drawing on recent evidence from scientific studies of the Antarctic ocean, atmosphere, cryosphere and biosphere.
‘Cascading influences’
The precise impact of climate change on Antarctica and the surrounding ocean has been uncertain and scientists have struggled to measure how much global warming is affecting the thickness of Antarctic ice.
However, from phenomena such as the rapid decline in sea ice, it is “scientifically reasonable” to assume that extreme events are going to intensify as global temperatures rise, said Martin Siegert, a glaciologist at the University of Exeter and another co-author.
Last year, an “atmospheric river” originating from Australia drove subtropical heat and moisture into the continent, causing unprecedented temperatures up to 38.5 Celsius (69.3 Fahrenheit) above normal, the largest variance from the norm the world has ever experienced.
Siegert described the temperature increase as “absolutely astonishing”, adding if it had occurred during the Antarctic summer, instead of winter, it would have triggered melting on the surface of the East Antarctic ice sheet, which has so far been spared from melting.
“Antarctica is fragile as an environment, but extreme events test that fragility,” he said. “What we’re deeply concerned about is the increase in intensity and frequency of extreme events and the cascading influences that they have in other areas.”
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