A weather buoy near the North Pole just hit melting point
23
December, 2016
This
is bad.
A
weather buoy floating 144 km (90 miles) south of the North Pole
registered 0.4 degrees Celsius (32.7 Fahrenheit) yesterday, and if
the North Pole follows suit as expected, it will have officially hit
melting point.
Temperatures
in the Arctic are now 30°C (54°F) above normal for this time of
year, because according to the Norwegian Meteorological Institute,
the region should be around -30°C (-22°F).
This
is the second time in the past five weeks we’ve seen such a steep
rise in temperatures, and it’s like nothing we’ve seen in more
than half a century.
"In
reviewing historical records back to 1958, one cannot find a more
intense anomaly - except following a similar spike just five weeks
ago," Jason Samenow reports for The Washington Post.
Back
in November, researchers gave everyone pause when they reported that
temperatures near the North Pole were an unheard of 20°C (36°F)
warmer than average.
At
the time, the Arctic was in the midst of polar night, when the Sun
hardly ever rises. This was supposed to be when the region gets
really cold, allowing for expanses of thick ice sheets to form after
the warmer months.
But
this year, we got much higher temperatures than the average during
polar night, and while new sea ice started forming, it did so at a
much slower rate than usual.
As
Petteri Taalas, secretary-general of the World Meteorological
Organisation (WMO), said in November:
"In
parts of Arctic Russia, temperatures were 10.8 to 12.6°F [6°C to
7°C] above the long-term average. Many other Arctic and sub-Arctic
regions in Russia, Alaska, and northwest Canada were at least 5.4°F
[3°C] above average.
We
are used to measuring temperature records in fractions of a degree,
and so this is different."
Fast-forward
to now, and we’re seeing it all happen again, thanks to a freak
blast of warm air sweeping over the Arctic on Thursday, and record
low levels of sea ice.
A huge pulse of anomalous warmth over the north pole during today and tomorrow, will certainly not help sea ice re-growth. #Arctic
According
to The Washington Post, preliminary data from the US National Snow
and Ice Data Centre indicate that the Arctic lost about 148,000
square kilometres (57,000 square miles) of ice in the past 24 hours.
That's
enough ice to cover the entire state of Illinois.
While
these figures still need to be independently confirmed, we do know
that sea ice off the coasts of both Antarctica and the Arctic hit
record lows in November. As of December 4, we’d lost 3.76 million
square kilometres of the stuff - more than the total area of India.
"If
nothing is done to slow climate change, by the time global warming
reaches 2°C (3.6°F), events like this winter would become common at
the North Pole, happening every few years," said research
organisation, Climate Central.
If
an unusually warm North Pole stressing us all out just before
Christmas is giving you some serious déjà vu, you're spot on.
While
the past couple of months have seen unusually rapid spikes in
temperature, this isn't the first time the North Pole has hit melting
point. An almost identical event occurred this time last year, when
the North Pole crept over 0°C... in winter.
Strap
in, everyone. We've got some weird times ahead.
Thanks for all your hard work, I love this blog, it's important!
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