Toronto Star

Arctic ice at record low for winter, agency says

Even the North Pole saw temperatur­es above zero

- BOB WEBER

Arctic sea ice reached a record winter low this year — the latest mark in a season that has left scientists gape-mouthed in amazement.

“I’ve never seen such a warm, crazy winter in the Arctic,” said an email from Mark Serreze, director of the U.S.-based National Snow and Ice Data Center. “The heat was relentless.”

Serreze’s group declared Monday that the maximum extent of sea ice before it begins its spring melt was 20,000 square kilometres less this winter than it has ever been since satellite monitoring began. The record had been set only last year.

The low level was reached after a winter that had scientists doing double takes at the data.

Temperatur­es over the Arctic Ocean in December, January and February were 2 C to 6 C above average in nearly every region. Even the North Pole saw above-zero conditions.

The record comes after 10 straight months of all-time high global average temperatur­es.

The winter experience­d an especially powerful El Nino in the Pacific, which brought mild temperatur­es to many parts of North America. But scientists discount the influence of the warm ocean current on the Arctic. They point out that previous strong El Ninos didn’t produce the kind of warm temperatur­es the North experience­d this year.

Arctic sea ice has been declining at about 12 per cent a decade since satellite monitoring began in the late 1970s. The Arctic has been warming at about twice the rate of the rest of the globe and is about four degrees warmer than it was before climate change began.

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