The Day

Arctic Ocean and Greenland have seen record June ice loss

- By JASON SAMENOW

Ice is melting in unpreceden­ted ways as summer approaches in the Arctic. In recent days, observatio­ns have revealed a record-challengin­g melt event over the Greenland ice sheet while the extent of ice over the Arctic Ocean has never been this low in mid-June during the age of weather satellites.

Greenland saw temperatur­es soar up to 40 degrees above normal Wednesday while open water exists in places north of Alaska where it seldom, if ever, has in recent times.

It’s “another series of extreme events consistent with the long-term trend of a warming, changing Arctic,” said Zachary Labe, a climate researcher at the University of California-Irvine.

And the abnormal warmth and melting of ice in the Arctic may be messing with our weather.

Greenland ice sheet

Data from the National Snow and Ice Data Center show the Greenland ice sheet appears to have witnessed its biggest melt event so early in the season on record this past week (although a few other years showed similar mid-June melting).

“The melting is big and early,” said Jason Box, an ice climatolog­ist at the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland.

Box explained temperatur­es over the western Greenland ice sheet have been abnormally high while snow has been well below normal.

Marco Tedesco, an ice researcher at Columbia University, added it’s been unusually warm in east and central Greenland as well. “This has triggered widespread melting that has reached about 45 percent of the ice sheet,” he wrote in an email.

Normally, melting this widespread over the ice sheet doesn’t occur until mid-summer, if even then.

A simulation from the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecastin­g suggested temperatur­es over Greenland may have peaked at around 40 degrees above normal on Wednesday.

A big dome of high pressure has positioned itself over Greenland, resulting in sunny skies and mild temperatur­es which have enabled melting. An automated weather station at the top of Greenland’s ice sheet topped freezing on June 12, a very rare event, which last occurred in July 2012.

2012 is the notorious year in which the Greenland ice sheet witnessed the most melting on record. Those monitoring the ice sheet say melting in 2019 could rival it.

Weather conditions in the coming months will determine how much more the ice sheet melts and whether 2019 is a record-setter. If high pressure holds in place, “we should break a new record,” tweeted Xavier Fettweis, a climatolog­ist at the University of Liège in Belgium.

But scientists studying the region know Greenland’s weather is highly variable and can change on the dime.

Mike MacFerrin, a a glaciologi­st at the University of Colorado, put it this way in a tweet: “2019 has been ... anomalous ... so far, but also quite variable. It’s early and weather is weather, so keep your eyes peeled ...”

Arctic Sea ice

Weather satellites have monitored sea ice in the Arctic since 1979, and the current ice coverage is the lowest on record for mid-June.

The ice extent has been especially depleted in the part of the Arctic Ocean adjacent to the Pacific Ocean. “It’s pretty remarkable how much open water is in that area,” said Labe.

Labe explained high pressure over the Arctic has helped to pull sea ice way from the northern Alaska coast.

Sea ice loss over the Chukchi and Beaufort seas along Alaska’s northern coast has been “unpreceden­ted” according to Rick Thoman, a climatolog­ist based in Fairbanks.

Labe said there’s sufficient open water that you could sail all the way from the Bering Strait into a narrow opening just north of Utqiaġvik, Alaska’s northernmo­st city, clear into the Beaufort Sea. “It’s very unusual for open water this early in this location,” he said.

With all of the exposed water, ocean temperatur­es in this region will rise, Labe said. This should delay the customary fall freeze and will likely result in a historical­ly low late summer sea ice minimum, typically in mid-September.

Whether the Arctic sea ice minimum is record-setting, like the Greenland ice sheet, will depend on weather in the coming months.

“There is no indication that this year will be as low as 2012,” when Arctic sea ice reached its lowest extent on record, Labe said. “If cloudy weather occurs, it would slow down the rate (of melting). It’s really hard to predict.”

The extreme conditions in the Arctic, which have resulted in these record-challengin­g melt events, have far-reaching implicatio­ns. There is a saying often repeated by Arctic researcher­s, “what happens in the Arctic, doesn’t stay in the Arctic.”

The bulging zones of high pressure in the Arctic, which have facilitate­d the unusual warmth and intensifie­d melting, are displacing the cold air normally contained in that region into the mid-latitudes — like a refrigerat­or door left open. Much of the central and eastern United States have seen cooler than normal temperatur­es in the past week.

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