First published in
New Matilda, 28 August 2012
There's half as much sea-ice as there was 30 years ago and the annual
summer melt keeps smashing records. David Spratt on why Australian
policy-makers should be paying attention.
In the last few days something so dramatic has happened in the Arctic that it demands another look at Australia's climate policies.
On Friday 24 August, annual summer melting of the floating sea-ice in the Arctic Ocean smashed the previous record, with another three weeks of the melt season still to to go. Scientists are calling it "stunning" and "astounding". This breaks the record set in 2007. Back then there were scientific gasps that the sea ice was melting
“100 years ahead of schedule”.
Thirty years ago, the summer sea-ice extent was around
7.5 million square kilometres (similar to area of Australia), but this year it will end up at half that figure. And the ice is becoming thinner, due to melting from below by warmer seas, and the relentless loss of thicker, multi-year ice. So the
volume of the summer ice will in 2012 be only around one quarter of what it was three decades ago. Now it looks like the sea-ice will be gone in summer within a decade or so, maybe sooner. That's what many of the cryopshere scientists and models
are saying.