Vanishing
Arctic ice is the planet's white flag of surrender
The
planet's last great global ice melt left a benign and balmy climate
in which civilisation was cradled: the new great melting heralds a
grave threat to civilisation
15
September, 2012
A
webcam at the north pole shows ice cap melting on 22 August 2012.
Photograph: University of Washington/ North Pole Environmental
Observatory/NOAA
Our
planet is waving the white flag of surrender. But as the polar flag
becomes ever more tattered, with holes scorched by hotter ocean
waters, humanity pumps ever more globe-warming gases into the air.
The
story of the Arctic ice
cap is the story of modern environmentalism. In 1968, as satellites
began to document the vast ice field blanketing the north pole, the
iconic Earthrise
image was
beamed back to the ground. It revealed a planet of awesome beauty,
deep blue oceans,
verdant continents and crowned with at least 8m square kilometres of
gleaming ice. The image kickstarted the global green movement.
In
2007, a new
record was set for
the minimum summer sea
ice cover
in the Arctic had halved. This furious flag waving attracted
attention. That year, the world's scientists declared the end of any
doubt that our addiction to burning fossil fuels was changing the
face of the planet. Al Gore expounded his inconvenient truth and the
world seemed set to act.
Today,
that 2007
record is smashed and
the shredded white flag is now flickering rathering than flashing.
But the danger is greater than even, even if the alarm signal is
frayed.
The
last great global ice melt the planet witnessed came 10,000 years ago
at the end of a deep ice age. As glaciers retreated, a benign and
balmy climate emerged in which the human race has flourished. Our
entire civilisation is built on the warm soils left as the ice sheets
melted.
This
new great melting heralds the polar opposite: the gravest of threats
to civilisation. Removing the lid from the pole will release heat
equivalent to fast-forwarding
human-caused climate change by two decades,
say scientists.
Is
there even less Arctic sea ice than the satellites show?
Only
350 miles from the north pole, possibly 50% of the sea is covered in
ice, yet data says there is ice cover at this latitude
John
Vidal
15
September, 2012
Where
is the ice? We are now at 83.20N which is very close to the north
pole yet still there is no continuous ice cover (head
here for more on my
journey through the Arctic).
We are mostly among small, thin, one- and two-year-old floes, with
very little of the older, harder and more resilient "multiyear",
or permanent ice that you would expect in these latitudes.
Our
ice pilot, Arne Sorensen, went up in the helicopter and found little
change even as far north as 83.50 – just 350 miles from the pole.
Just finding an ice floe big enough to moor the 50 metre-long Arctic
Sunrise for the scientists aboard to conduct their experiments has
proven harder than expected – something that many think is almost
unheard of at this latitude.
The
obvious inference is that the ice has retreated far further this year
than before and we will need to check previous years' satellite data
to confirm this. But there may actually be far less ice in the Arctic
than the satellite figures suggest.
In
winter when the sea surface is frozen up here, scientists can be
pretty sure how much ice there is. But in the summer months when the
ice is melting and there's much more water around, the satellite can
become confused.
It
can think that melt water sitting on the ice floes is open water; it
may not be able to tell the size of the floes or the distance between
them; it can have problems "seeing" the ice because of
clouds and fog.
In
short, the melting effect makes it much harder to quantify the amount
of ice there is and the satellite tends to see more ice than there
actually is. That's why monitoring groups such as NSIDC or the
university of Bremen try to compensate with weather filters or by
calculating the ice extent over a number of days rather than on
individual ones.
We
know, here on the ship, how misleading the satellite data can be.
Here,
possibly only 50% of the sea is covered in ice. Yet the data is
telling the scientists that there is continuous ice cover at this
latitude.
That's
why Julienne Stroeve, ice expert from NSIDC the folk expected to flag
the record minimum ice extent record in a few days' time – has been
filming the ice conditions every few hours.
When
she returns, she hopes to match her real-time observations of the ice
conditions with the satellite data. She speculates that the low fog
conditions we have experienced could be making it seem there is more
ice than there actually is.
Either
way, the situation is deadly serious. Both satellites and
human observation suggests that the ice is now so thin over much of
the arctic that it doesn't matter how much it freezes in winter,
because it will melt in the summer. That would mean ice-free summers
in the arctic coming far sooner than the models have predicted.
Strangely,
what we are beginning to see is just what the old Arctic explorers
and visionaries such as Elisha Kane, Isaac Hayes, Captain W E Parry
and Sir John Barrow hoped to find. It was widely believed from the
16th century that there was a tepid lake at the north pole, and that
another continent lay beyond the ice. The problem facing explorers
then was to get beyond the icepack which barred the route. It was
this prospect of Arcadian lands that spurred these adventurers.
Today,
the prospect of an ice-free Arctic and easy access to the other side
of the world has become the dream of oil, mining and shipping
companies. The profits they see inn in the ice free sea are similar
to those seen by the British from a clear passage over the top of the
world to China and the east.
But
as Shell found off the coast of Alaska this week, nature bites back.
No sooner had the company started preliminary drilling for oil in the
Arctic Chukchi sea it
had to abandon the work because of freezing conditions
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