Arctic ice cap to disappear in 20-30 years - researchers
A handout picture obtained in London from Catlin Arctic Survey shows Ann Daniels in the Arctic.
The Arctic ice cap will vanish completely in summer months within 20-30 years, polar researchers said, sounding the alarm two months before a critical climate change summit in Copenhagen.
It is likely to be largely ice-free during the warmer months within a decade, according to findings from an arctic expedition led by British adventurer Pen Hadow.
Veteran polar explorer Mr Hadow and two other Britons went out on the Arctic ice cap for 73 days during the northern spring, taking more than 6,000 measurements and observations of the sea ice.
The raw data they collected from March to May has been analysed, producing some stark predictions about the state of the ice cap.
"The summer ice cover will completely vanish in 20 to 30 years but in less than that it will have considerably retreated," said Professor Peter Wadhams, head of the polar ocean physics group at Britain's Cambridge University.
"In about 10 years, the Arctic ice will be considered as open sea." Starting off from northern Canada, Hadow, Martin Hartley and Ann Daniels skied over the ice cap to measure the thickness of the remaining ice, assessing its density and the depth of overlying snow, as well as taking weather and sea temperature readings.
Across their 450-kilometre route, the average thickness of the ice floes was 1.8 metres, while it was 4.8 metres when incorporating the compressed ridges of ice.
"An average thickness of 1.8 metres is typical of first year ice, which is more vulnerable in the summer. And the multi-year ice is shrinking back more rapidly," said Prof. Wadhams.
"It's a concrete example of global change in action.
"With a larger part of the region now in first year ice, it is clearly more vulnerable. The area is now more likely to become open water each summer, bringing forward the potential date when the summer sea ice will be completely gone."
Martin Sommerkorn, senior climate change adviser for the World Wide Fund for Nature's international Arctic programme, said the survey painted a sombre picture of the ice meltdown, which was happening "faster than we thought".
"Remove the Arctic ice cap and we are left with a very different and much warmer world," he said.
Loss of sea ice cover will "set in motion powerful climate feedbacks which will have an impact far beyond the Arctic itself," he added.
"This could lead to flooding affecting one quarter of the world's population, substantial increases in greenhouse gas emission from massive carbon pools and extreme global weather changes.
"Today's findings provide yet another urgent call for action to world leaders ahead of the UN climate summit in Copenhagen in December to rapidly and effectively curb global greenhouse gas emissions."
British energy and climate change minister Ed Miliband said the report "sets out the stark realities of a rapidly changing climate and illustrates the risk of an ice free summer in the Arctic in the not-too-distant future".
"This further strengthens the case for an ambitious global deal in Copenhagen in December which the UK is fully committed to achieving," he added.
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Alex Ellul
Oct 17th 2009, 14:28
With the meeting on climate change due this December, and with science and facts showing that Global warming has stopped and that the planet is actually cooling, the truth-hiding media and money-grabbing scientists are giving us a lot of lies to try to suppport the moribund UN sanctioned proposal for a global agreement on climate change and to apply heavy taxes on carbon which would end up taken out from our own pockets by our politicians. The arctic will never be free of ice and this has been admitted by the ex-chief of Greenpeace a few weeks ago. LIES LIES LIES. Fact is Poar ice has grown these last two years since the minimum seen in 2007. This minimum is only relevant, as a minimum, for the last few decades since humans put ice-measuring satellites into orbit. Hence nobody knows if polar ice cover was even less than the 2007 minimum in remote past.