Arctic
Sea Ice 'Vanishing At
Faster Rate Than Expected'
By Steve Connor
02 May 2007
The
Independent
Scientists
may have seriously underestimated the speed at which Arctic sea ice
will melt in the coming decades, caused by global warming, according
to a study published today.
All of the computer models
used by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) appear
to have erred on the side of extreme caution when estimating the time
it will take for sea ice to disappear during summer.
Researchers have found that
the sea ice, which is essential for polar bears to hunt seals, is melting
far more quickly than the IPCC has predicted, largely because of accelerated
warming caused by man-made emissions of greenhouse gases. The IPCC models
predict that summer sea ice in the Arctic could disappear completely
around 2080 but scientists from the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre
in Boulder, Colorado, suggest that the loss could occur 30 years earlier
if current melting rates are maintained.
Julienne Stroeve, the lead
researcher, said: "Current model projections may in fact provide
a conservative estimate of future Arctic change, and that the summer
Arctic sea ice may disappear considerably earlier than IPCC projections."
The scientists used computer
models to make predictions about the loss of sea ice between 1953 to
2006 and compared the projections with what actually happened based
on early measurements made by aircraft and ships as well as more recent
satellite data.
According to the models,
the average sea ice loss in September - when summer sea ice is at its
seasonal minimum - should have been 2.5 per cent per decade, with a
maximum loss of 5.4 per cent per decade. However, the actual loss based
on real measurements for September amounted to 7.8 per cent per decade
for the same period between 1953 and 2006.
One of the reasons why the
Arctic sea ice is disappearing so quickly is because the loss of reflective
ice causes the open ocean to absorb heat more easily.
© 2007 Independent News
and Media Limited
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