Global Times

Sea ice hits record low at both poles

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The sea ice cover in the Arctic and Antarctic hit new record lows for this time of year, marking the smallest polar ice caps in the 38- year satellite record, US government scientists said Wednesday.

In March, the Arctic ice sheet should be at its biggest, but on March 7 the ice cover reached “a record low wintertime maximum extent,” said a statement by the US space agency NASA.

Data from the NASA- supported National Snow and Ice Data Center ( NSIDC) in Boulder, Colorado, also showed that on March 3, “sea ice around Antarctica hit its lowest extent ever recorded by satellites at the end of summer in the Southern Hemisphere.”

The disappeari­ng sea ice comes as the planet has marked three years in a row of recordbrea­king heat, raising new concerns about the accelerati­ng pace of global warming and the need to curb burning of fossil fuels which spew heat- trapping greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere.

The ice floating in the Arctic Ocean grows and shrinks on a seasonal cycle, reaching its largest size in March and its smallest at the end of the summer melting period in September.

This year’s Arctic maximum spanned 5.57 million square miles ( 14.42 million square kilometers).

That is 37,000 square miles below the previous record low in 2015.

When scientists take account of the average sea ice extent for 1981- 2010, this year’s ice cover is 471,000 square miles smaller.

The Arctic sea ice maximum has dropped by an average of 2.8 percent per decade since 1979, NASA said.

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