Greenland Melt Extent Breaks 50% on July 4; 2 Standard Deviation Line Shattered Yet Again
6 July, 2015
These
days — in the age of the fossil-fueled hothouse — it’s never
good news when a high pressure system forms over Greenland during
Summer.
Human
dumping of carbon into the atmosphere has forced warming over the
last remaining great Northern Hemisphere ice sheet at a rate of about
0.5 degrees Celsius each decade. A constant rain of soot from human
industry and from increasingly prevalent and intense Arctic
wildfires has
painted the ice sheet dark,
lowering its ability to reflect 24 hours of incoming radiation from
the Summer sun. And the result is that each Summer, when the skies
clear and high pressure systems form over the ailing Greenland ice,
you end up getting these huge surface melt spikes.
(Smoke
from record Alaskan and Canadian wildfire outbreaks traverses
Greenland and enters the North Atlantic on July 2 of 2015. Arctic
wildfires are intensified by human-caused warming both through the
mechanism of added heat and through the reintroduction of long
sequestered carbon fuels through permafrost melt which aids in the
initiation, intensification and extension of Arctic wildfire burn
periods. In essence soil carbon in the form of thawed permafrost and
related methane adds to boreal forest, tundra and bog as burn risks.
Soot from these fires can then precipitates onto land and sea ice,
reducing its ability to reflect the 24 hour Summer Arctic sun. Image
source: LANCE
MODIS.)
Generally
a big melt spike can be defined as anything greater than 35 percent
of Greenland ice surface area. And we’ve had quite a few of these
abnormal events in recent years. The worst of which happened in mid
Summer of 2012.
During
late June and early July of that year, an extreme high amplitude Jet
Stream wave generated very warm surface temperatures over the
Greenland Ice Sheet. A very warm fog settled over the ice, eating
away at it. By July 8th, more than 90 percent of the surface was
melting — an event that hasn’t happened in Greenland for more
than 100 years. June, July and August of 2013 and 2014 saw similar,
though somewhat less intense, Greenland melt spikes. During those
years the ice sheet experienced multiple days in which melt covered
between 35 and 45 percent of its surface. And though these instances
were not as intense as the unprecedented 2012 melting, they did
traverse well beyond the 1981 to 2010 average line (an average that
itself includes a rapid warming trend) to, in cases, exceed the upper
2 standard deviation margin.
(Record
Greenland surface melt during 2012 compared to still strong surface
melt years of 2013 and 2014. Image source: NSIDC.)
After
record 2012 melt, surface melt for Greenland has remained abnormally
high — indicating an increased likelihood that more near 100
percent surface melt summer days may not be too far off in the
future. The post 2012 environment for Greenland has thus been a
period of continued and heightened surface melt. One that appears to
be in the process of building up to another big pulse.
50
Percent Melt Threshold Exceeded During July of 2015
The
summer of 2015 marks a continuation and intensification of this
ominous surface melt trend. After getting off to about an average
melt start during April and May, June saw surface warmth build over
the Greenland Ice Sheet with melt extents jumping to between 30 and
40 percent of surface area by mid-to-late month. Further
warming coincided with massive Alaskan and Canadian wildfires
injecting soot plumes into regional airspace and
the building of a substantial high pressure ridge over Greenland.
These factors helped enable further atmospheric and ice warming —
shoving surface melt above the 50 percent line by July 4th.
(Major
Greenland melt spike indicated on July 1-5 in the NSIDC surface melt
extent graph. Image source: NSIDC.)
This
puts 2015 Greenland surface melt in a range well above 2013 and 2014,
with the first week of July already exceeding 2012 melt for that
period.
Over
the next seven days, models
predict a larger warming of the overall Arctic environmenteven
as a high pressure system and associated ridge remains entrenched
across Greenland. This predicted weather pattern will tend to lock in
significantly warmer than 20th Century average temperatures. That
said, forecast highs do not yet indicate a substantial risk for a
repeat of 2012’s near 100 percent surface melt. However, projected
high temperatures do show some potential that melt percentages are
likely to continue to range between 40 and 60 percent surface melt
over coming days with the highest risk for melt spikes occurring on
July 6th, 7th and 8th.
It
is worth noting that we are now in the midst of a substantial
Greenland melt spike, one that we’ll continue to monitor over
coming days for further developments.
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