Arctic Ice Extent Discrepancy: NSIDC versus Cryosphere Today

Foreword: I had originally planned to post a story on this, but Steven Goddard of the UK Register sends word that he has already done a comparison. It mirrors much of what I would have written. There is a clear discrepancy between the two data sources. What is unclear is the cause. Is it differing measurement and tabulation methods? Or, is it some post measurement adjustment being applied. With a 30 percent difference, it would seem that the public would have difficulty determining which dataset is the truly representative one.

UPDATE: The questions have been answered, see correction below – Anthony


Arctic ice refuses to melt as ordered

Published Friday 15th August 2008 10:02 GMT – source story is here

Just a few weeks ago, predictions of Arctic ice collapse were buzzing all over the internet. Some scientists were predicting that the “North Pole may be ice-free for first time this summer”. Others predicted that the entire “polar ice cap would disappear this summer”.

The Arctic melt season is nearly done for this year. The sun is now very low above the horizon and will set for the winter at the North Pole in five weeks. And none of these dire predictions have come to pass. Yet there is, however, something odd going on with the ice data.

The National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) in Boulder, Colorado released an alarming graph on August 11, showing that Arctic ice was rapidly disappearing, back towards last year’s record minimum. Their data shows Arctic sea ice extent only 10 per cent greater than this date in 2007, and the second lowest on record. Here’s a smaller version of the graph:

Arctic ice not disappearingThe National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC)’s troublesome ice graph

The problem is that this graph does not appear to be correct. Other data sources show Arctic ice having made a nice recovery this summer. NASA Marshall Space Flight Center data shows 2008 ice nearly identical to 2002, 2005 and 2006. Maps of Arctic ice extent are readily available from several sources, including the University of Illinois, which keeps a daily archive for the last 30 years. A comparison of these maps (derived from NSIDC data) below shows that Arctic ice extent was 30 per cent greater on August 11, 2008 than it was on the August 12, 2007. (2008 is a leap year, so the dates are offset by one.)

Ice at the ArcticIce at the Arctic: 2007 and 2008 snapshots

The video below highlights the differences between those two dates. As you can see, ice has grown in nearly every direction since last summer – with a large increase in the area north of Siberia. Also note that the area around the Northwest Passage (west of Greenland) has seen a significant increase in ice. Some of the islands in the Canadian Archipelago are surrounded by more ice than they were during the summer of 1980.

The 30 per cent increase was calculated by counting pixels which contain colors representing ice. This is a conservative calculation, because of the map projection used. As the ice expands away from the pole, each new pixel represents a larger area – so the net effect is that the calculated 30 per cent increase is actually on the low side.

So how did NSIDC calculate a 10 per cent increase over 2007? Their graph appears to disagree with the maps by a factor of three (10 per cent vs. 30 per cent) – hardly a trivial discrepancy.

What melts the Arctic?

The Arctic did not experience the meltdowns forecast by NSIDC and the Norwegian Polar Year Secretariat. It didn’t even come close. Additionally, some current graphs and press releases from NSIDC seem less than conservative. There appears to be a consistent pattern of overstatement related to Arctic ice loss.

We know that Arctic summer ice extent is largely determined by variable oceanic and atmospheric currents such as the Arctic Oscillation. NASA claimed last summer that “not all the large changes seen in Arctic climate in recent years are a result of long-term trends associated with global warming”. The media tendency to knee-jerkingly blame everything on “global warming” makes for an easy story – but it is not based on solid science. ®

Bootnote

And what of the Antarctic? Down south, ice extent is well ahead of the recent average. Why isn’t NSIDC making similarly high-profile press releases about the increase in Antarctic ice over the last 30 years?

The author, Steven Goddard, is not affiliated directly or indirectly with any energy industry, nor does he have any current affiliation with any university.


NOTE OF CORRECTION FROM STEVEN GODDARD:

The senior editor at the Register has added a footnote to the article with

excerpts from Dr. Meier’s letter, and a short explanation of why my analysis

was incorrect.

To expound further – after a lot of examination of UIUC maps, I discovered

that while their 2008 maps appear golden, their 2007 maps do not agree well

with either NSIDC maps or NASA satellite imagery.  NSIDC does not archive

their maps, but I found one map from August 19, 2007.  I overlaid the NSIDC

map on top of the UIUC map from the same date.  As you can see below, the

NSIDC ice map (white) shows considerably greater extent than the UIUC maps

(colors.)  The UIUC ice sits back much further from the Canadian coast than

does the NSIDC ice.  The land lines up perfectly between the maps, so it

appears possible that the UIUC ice is mapped using a different projection

than their land projection.

Click for larger image

Because the 2007 UIUC maps show less area, the increase in 2008 appears

greater.  This is the crux of the problem. I am convinced that the NSIDC

data is correct and that my analysis is flawed.  The technique is

theoretically correct, but the output is never better than the raw data.

Prior to writing the article, I had done quite a bit of comparison of UIUC

vs. NSIDC vs. NASA for this year.  The hole in my methodology was not

performing the same analysis for last year.  (The fact that NSIDC doesn’t

archive their maps of course contributed to the difficulty of that

exercise.)

My apologies to Dr. Meiers and Dr. Serreze, and NSIDC.  Their analysis,

graphs and conclusions were all absolutely correct.  Arctic ice is indeed

melting nearly as fast as last year, and this is indeed troubling.

– Steven Goddard

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Hud
August 22, 2008 12:33 pm

Mr. Gore won a political prize, not a scientific award. Throughout history, politics has corrupted scienTISTS, but in the end, SCIENCE prevails.

August 22, 2008 4:10 pm

I have a wild suggestion…
In looking at this, I have taken NSIDC satellite data, and made my own images. I have projected them on the globe using a viewpoint above the pole which has a tangent to the surface at about latitude 27. This gives a very close match for the land masses.
Everything lines up very well indeed if I assume that the 2007 image is actually showing the area with ice cover at 50% or more; but the 2008 image is showing the area with ice cover at 30% or more. In particular, the NSIDC data allows me to construct an overlay of the 50% ice, or the 30% ice, and I get a very very close match with the UIUC images when I put them all together.
Here are the numbers, comparing UIUC images assuming this projection, the JAXA report of 15% ice cover or more, and my own simple area-weighted sum of extent from the NASA data (f13 channel, ~25km grid)
For 12-Aug-2007
36683 pixels of ice on the UIUC image
4469014 sq km projected area
4201452 sq km at 50% or more, by simple count of NASA data
5057390 sq km at 30% or more, by simple count of NASA data
5679174 sq km at 15% or more, by simple count of NASA data
5421094 sq km at 15% or more, reported by JAXA
Some small differences are to be expected from processing differences; but basically the UIUC projected area lines up well with the extent of 50% ice, and JAXA lines up with the extent of 15% ice.
For 11-Aug-2007
47822 pixels of ice on the UIUC image
5882718 sq km projected area
4612971 sq km at 50% or more, by simple count of NASA data
5783576 sq km at 30% or more, by simple count of NASA data
6462289 sq km at 15% or more, by simple count of NASA data
6291563 sq km at 15% or more, reported by JAXA
This time the UIUC projected area lines up well with the extent of 30% ice, and JAXA still lines up with the extent of 15% ice.
Furthermore, I have projected the NASA data onto bitmaps, projected to align with UIUC images, and I get close agreement with the images using 50% for 2007 and 30% for 2008.
I’m going to stick my neck out and predict that the UIUC archived images are actually showing the extent of ice at 50% or more, and that the recent UIUC images are showing the extent of ice at 30% or more.

August 22, 2008 4:23 pm

Oops. On my previous comment, the 11-Aug-2007 above the second set of figures should be 11-Aug-2008

dipole
August 22, 2008 9:24 pm

Duae Quartunciae (16:10:29) says:
I’m going to stick my neck out…
Excellent piece of calculation DQ. If you are correct there should be a sudden and physically implausible jump in pixel count at some point in the UIUC image sequence.

August 23, 2008 7:12 am

I’m going to pull my head back in…
dipole had an excellent way to test my hypothesis, and it doesn’t seem to work.
Basically, there is no discontinuity I can see. The data in 2007 is closer to the 50% ice extent; but this may just be a co-incidence. I’m now really curious; but it could be a problem in my own maths. I’ll double check… no assurance I can come back to this soon, sorry.

hunter
August 23, 2008 8:12 am

Your explanation of your reconciliation of the two data sources is being used by AGW believers as an admission that inspite of the facts, there is as large a melt this year as last.

dhogaza
August 23, 2008 11:28 am

That’s because there has BEEN as large a melt this year as last. Remember that cold winter you guys were all excited about, and the recovery of arctic ice that y’all were going on about? Remember you guys being so excited that ice extent at the beginning of the melt season was greater than in 2007?
Yes, the ice extent up to this point in 2008, is about 5% higher than in 2007. But since there was more ice to begin with, the amount that’s melted this year is about the same as last year (thus far).
Nothing odd about that. You don’t even need algebra to figure it out, nor multiplication and division. Simple subtraction is sufficient.
Or just look at the NSIDC graph…

Demesure
August 25, 2008 6:58 am

“Or just look at the NSIDC graph…”
You’re correct dhogaza, we should just look at graphs instead of relying on AGW experts’ predictions. For 2008’s minimum extent, they mostly (9 out 17 teams) predict a lower or equal extent compared to the 2007 low record.
And that’s a “prediction” just … 2 months ago (June report) :
http://www.arcus.org/search/seaiceoutlook/report_june.php

August 25, 2008 8:58 am

Demesure (06:58:19) :
You’re correct dhogaza, we should just look at graphs instead of relying on AGW experts’ predictions. For 2008’s minimum extent, they mostly (9 out 17 teams) predict a lower or equal extent compared to the 2007 low record.

“Of the 17 responses, all suggest that the extent will remain lower than the historical average (i.e., mean 1979–2000 September values) of 7.0 million square kilometers.”
All correct.
“Five (5) responses suggested a less dramatic loss than in 2007 (i.e., 4.3 million square kilometers) and closer to the pre-2007 long-term trend of approximately 10% loss per decade.”
Too conservative, already passed.
“Five (5) anticipate a repeat of the dramatic loss of 2007.”
They look like being on the money.
“Four (4) suggest a loss even greater than that experienced in 2007.”
They could still be right but it will be close to the wire.
“Three (3) give more detailed reports on regional trends.”
Didn’t play the game.
Reading the more detailed report yielded this . The current value is 5.4 and still dropping so the more conservative predictions have already been passed, it looks like it will end up close to the average of the predictions. Not bad since most of the melt has occurred since those predictions were made.

August 25, 2008 9:52 am

Sorry image tag didn’t work, I was referring to this graph:
http://www.arcus.org/search/seaiceoutlook/report_june.php

Rick
August 27, 2008 11:14 am

http://nsidc.org/images/arcticseaicenews/200807_Figure1.png
http://nsidc.org/images/arcticseaicenews/20080717_Figure1.png
http://nsidc.org/images/arcticseaicenews/20080801_Figure1.png
Interesting…as long as the sea ice matched the “median” line, it was called the “median”. As soon as the ice was less than that line, it is called “normal”.
So is the melting sea ice below “median” or is it below “normal”? And is it “normal” to be below “median”?
Wouldn’t it be more scientific to be more constant with their statistical terms?
Links to the maps where I noticed the change.

Fred Houpt
August 28, 2008 10:19 am

I just read this in today’s English internet Der Spiegel:
http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,574815,00.html
I had to laugh. I read this part: “Many, in fact, have begun talking about an Arctic Ocean completely free of ice. The way things look now, such a scenario is not in the immediate future, but a sad, new record may indeed by set this year: The tiniest quantity of Arctic ice since scientists first started taking measurements. The Arctic melting season has another three weeks to go before the flat angle of the sun’s rays mark the onset of winter.”
I find the unsupported claim that the Arctic has not seen such a small ice coverage outrageous. No reference to any study whatsoever. In my view, this is the opinion of the writer but it comes across sounding as if based on known facts.
Another thing that I noted missing was the fact that the waters all along the passageways are often shallow and littered with hull-destroying boulders just waiting for a deep draft tanker to troll by. These waters have NEVER ever been dredged and to think that they will raises the big question of who will pay the astronomical price? Canada? Not bloody likely. I do not know how the ice breakers make their way through without hitting rocks? Perhaps they are double hull lined, go slowly and have advanced sonar to make sure they avoid trouble?
Finally, what I found ridiculous is the premise that at the last days of August, when this current ice free/ice thin environment has shown up will somehow in future years provide a workable shortcut for big ships? I mean, what are they thinking? The ships would have to enter the northwest passage at a time when the vast majority is still ice covered and wait until it breaks up. If it takes till the end of August, what are the ships going to do? Wait it out up in northern Hudson’s Bay? It makes no sense to start planning to use the passage because as I say it is a far too short period and the lane ways are not dredged. For me the use of the NWP is still a far off dream.

August 30, 2008 7:06 am

[…] and I found out about it via Tom Nelson (a very reliable source). It turns out that the author has revised his analysis based on conversations with the NSIDC; the differences in the photographs he used to determine ice […]

August 31, 2008 8:45 am

[…] my most recent article in The Register, and also posted here on WUWT, I incorrectly speculated that NSIDC graphs appeared to show less growth in Arctic ice extent than […]

Hello
September 9, 2008 10:51 am

I dont know about you guys but i dont belived in this post.
Here are a NASA link which shows that sea ice retreated enough to create open waters all the way around the northern ice pack.
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/IPY/multimedia/ipyimg_20080909.html
You articles shows sattelite images but are they real? Do you have real links for that images ? Can you post them here in order to confirm your theory ?

September 14, 2008 1:39 pm

We are currently, according to Cryosphere Today data, at last year’s record low sea ice measurement. Any further melt, at all, will result in a new record.

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