Arctic
Sea Ice Very Slow to Refreeze As Record Heat Hits Alaska
Nicholas
Humphrey
4
October, 2018
Sea
ice in the Arctic...a major regulator of not only regional climate
but global climate circulation...is experiencing extremely slow
refreeze after experiencing the 6th lowest extent on record. This is
because of a highly amplified jet stream pattern causing strong high
pressure to persist over parts of Alaska and the Chukchi-Beaufort Sea
Region of the Arctic Ocean. And, much
in line with the hypothesis of Dr. Jennifer Francis on how jet
streams can be altered by loss of sea ice,
very abnormally warm waters from the previous season's sea ice low
extents have led to this autumn's set up for limiting refreeze.
Analysis
of the 2018 seasonal sea ice minimum in mid-September compared to
1981-2010 climatology and 2012 record.
As mentioned, Arctic sea ice was extent was the 6th lowest seasonal minimum extent on record. But also notable PhD candidate and researcher Zach Labe notes the Arctic Ocean Basin sea ice was the 3rd lowest extent on record for the date September 27th.
Post-seasonal minimum freezing compared to normals of the 2000s, 1990s and 1980s.
Sea
Surface Temperature Anomalies (relative to 1961-1990 climatology)
showing extreme temperature anomalies throughout the marginal seas of
the Arctic Ocean and notably, 4-8 C anomalies in the Chuchi Sea (the
sea area between Russia and Alaska north of the Bering Strait).
Actual water temperatures area are up to 8-10 C (46-50 F).
The
very slow and abnormal refreeze...the long-term consequence of the
ongoing collapse and eventual end of sea ice in the Arctic...is also
part of the wider decrease in ice on the planet in general. I noticed
by coincidence just prior to writing this article another sad and
dubious record for the global warming history books...*global* sea
ice extent...so for both the Northern and Southern
Hemisphere...reached a daily record low yesterday. This year just
edged out the previous two years, showing how quickly global sea ice
is suffering losses.
Daily
record low for global sea ice extent for October 2nd. Global sea ice
has continued to suffer with notable drops in the North Hemisphere
Autumn/Southern Hemisphere Spring. This is at least a result of
Arctic sea ice increasingly failing to refreeze and possibly spring
sea ice around Antarctica melting earlier, now both with lowering
extents year after year since the mid-2010s.
The
implications for the loss of ice on the this planet? Sea ice? Land
glaciation? It's easier for the planet to get hotter (which it is
becoming) and for our jet stream to become much more chaotic in terms
of "wave action" (which it is becoming). And we see things
like this:
Global
Forecast System model analysis valid 12 UTC October 1st showing
pressure anomalies in the middle of the atmosphere. Truly extreme and
historic pressure anomalies are ongoing over much of Alaska and over
the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas, driven by abnormally warm sea surface
temperatures and a very wavy jet stream pattern.
Mean
forecast surface temperature anomaly for October 3rd. Very warm
temperatures relative to normal in the Arctic from the high pressure
system.
According
to Richard
James, who was quoted in a recent Washington Post
article on the massive and persistent Alaska high pressure pattern:
In
his analysis of the intensity of the responsible high-pressure zone,
James found that it was 5.2
standard deviations above normal.
“We’d expect this kind of anomaly to occur less than once every
million years, on average (for this particular date window),” James
wrote, under the assumptions that the climate is static (which, of
course, it is not) and his analysis is correct.
Extraordinary.
The
long-term weakening of the mid-latitude jet stream because of Arctic
warming makes for continued situations where not only the
mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere must deal with general
warming trends, but also much more chaotic weather conditions from a
very increasingly wavy jet stream with far more frequent blocking
patterns, where long-wave systems move very little. I
have written about this previously
as this has been a prominent feature in more and more weather
patterns in recent years both in the winters as well as a product
of landfalling tropical cyclones.
And right on cue, in fact, next week for the US...
Persistent heat ridge for the east, cold trough for the west through perhaps the middle two thirds of October. Good news for the West is at least, higher probabilities of rainfall for drought-stricken areas, and this has already occurred thanks to the remnants of Hurricane Rosa.
European
Ensemble Model depiction of an extremely amplified jet stream
extending from Canada to Baja California on Monday, October 8th.
Abnormally cool in the West, heat in the East, very heavy rain from
Gulf of Mexico moisture in the middle of the US.
This
goes to the greater point of discussing climate change: Climate
Change doesn't just create new phenomena (in fact most phenomena
aren't "new", minus perhaps some records), but makes what
we've already observed more or less likely as our climate shifts to
extreme conditions. Very wavy patterns aren't unheard of at all. But
they are becoming more frequent because of climate change and are
having impacts on persistent stormy patterns, drought patterns, crop
health and production, etc. Just look at the disastrous crop failures
in Europe from the extreme record heat this year.
The
wrath of relentless climate change. Boreal Summer/Austral Winter 1918
vs. 2018 compared to 1881-1910 climatology. Last months of World War
I, there were isolated heat events...today? The planet is a giant
heat event.
Note the intense anomaly which blanketed Europe.
Beyond
just keeping the planet cooler (because of heat absorption and
reflection) these events show how the loss of ice harms our stable
climate regime and accelerates climate change, particularly sea ice
loss which has a large geographic extent and footprint. A footprint,
which is decreasing rapidly and having major impacts on our climate
and everything we and our fellow species depend on that stable
climate for.
Edit
at 10/4/2018: Revised caption for Interior Arctic Sea Ice graph to
indicate "3rd lowest on record" is the daily record for
September 27th.
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