Arctic Sea Ice Increases at Record Rate

Arctic Sea Ice Increases at Record Rate

Guest Post by Jeff Id on February 3, 2009

Something I’ve been interested in for the last several months is sea ice data. What makes it interesting is that as I understand it, models demonstrate the poles should be most sensitive to global warming leading the planet temp, especially in the Arctic. Recently I have been able to process the monthly and daily gridded arctic data as provided by NSIDC. The daily values allow a better analysis of trend than can be provided by the monthly data.

If you’re like me you recall the claims of fastest melt rate ever were made about 2007 , I fully believed them, because the graphs showed a much more negative value than in the previous 30 years as shown in Figure 1 below.

06-07-ice-area1
Click for larger image

This effort was originally intended to investigate how bad the melt rate was in comparison to the natural variation, I didn’t get that far yet. Accessing and processing the gridded data was critical to the analysis, so I spent the time reading the literature and writing code. Having full access to the NSIDC data allows some interesting analysis, they do an excellent job on their site.

There are two primary algorithms used for processing ice data NasaTeam and Bootstrap. The descriptions of the data state the difference between the two is very small and the sets are interchangeable except that bootstrap is recommended for trend analysis in research publications. Bootstrap is only provided in monthly data format while NasaTeam is provided in both monthly and daily provided you’re willing to download over 1G of data, write code to process it, refit the land and missing data mask and sum the results. I am. Also, NasaTeam provides a near real time version of the polar ice data which has a different land mask and hasn’t been processed for missing data. This data isn’t as clean but I wanted to use it. I applied the same land mask as the rest of the series to insure that there was a consistent baseline for trend analysis. The missing data from Jan 2008 onward created noise in the series which I simply filtered out using a 7 day sliding window filter.

The mask looks like this Figure 2

nasateam-arctic-ice-mask

The brown is land, black edges on land are coastline and light blue is the satellite data not measured. This mask is applied consistently through the entire data series. There was some question about masking on one of my other posts at WUWT where visually the land area seemed to change size, in the case of the NSIDC data they apply masks consistently except for the satellite hole and the near real time data.

The NasaTeam version of the arctic ice data looks like the plot below for  2009 (note the small size of the satellite data hole). This graph was created in R using the actual Nasa Team masks and data. I used the worst case land and polar masks to adjust the entire dataset to eliminate problems with consistency. Figure 3

nasateam-arctic-ice-feb-2009

Of course it’s an interesting picture, but what I wanted to know when I started this post was how bad was the worst melt rate in history and what is the actual melt area. In the plot below the arctic is losing sea ice at a rate of only 56K km^2/year. Of course sea ice area went up in the Antarctic during the same time frame though. Note the strong recovery in 08 of Figures 1 and 4, which actually exceeds values of most of the record, matching data back to 1980. Much of this is first year ice so the melt in 08 was expected to be a new record.

30-yr-ice-area1
Click for larger image

If you recall, in 2007 and 08 we were treated to headlines like this, which most of us accepted with a shrug.

Scientists warn Arctic sea ice is melting at its fastest rate since records began

NASA data show Arctic saw fastest sea ice melt in August 2008

Arctic Just Witnessed Fastest August Ice Retreat in History

I processed and analyzed the NasaTeam land area and missing data masks spending hours understanding different variances they list on their own website. After nearly everything I could find (except satellite transitions errors) was corrected (a different post) and corrections for variance in the measured pixel size, the final result in 30 day trends of arctic sea ice looks like the graph below (Figure 5). This graph is a derivative of the ice area plot. The maximum peaks and valleys represent the maximum rates of change in 30 day periods through the ice record.

meltrate
Click for larger image

Looking at this plot of the 30 day slopes of actual NASA gridded data, the maximum ice melt rate occurs in 1999 and in 2004 not in 2007. Surprisingly the maximum ice growth rates occur in 2007 and 2008, I don’t remember those headlines for some reason. Don’t forget when looking at the 2008 – 09 peak, the data is preliminary and hasn’t been through the same processing as the other data. From looking at the unprocessed data I doubt it will change much.

Certainly the 30 year arctic trend in ice area is downward, even the most committed global warming scientist has to admit this happens regularly in climate along with regular 30 year uptrends. The questions are, did we cause it or not, and was CO2 the instigating factor. The rapid recovery of ice levels has to have some meaning regarding the severity of the problem. This goes directly in the face of accelerated global warming and the doom and gloom scenarios promoted by our politicians and polyscienticians.

Why are my conclusions different from the news reported records? I think it’s likely due to the fact that the scientists used the monthly data which is processed using a weighted filter of the daily data that incorporates a longer time frame than a single month. This means their use of the monthly data to establish a monthly trend was in error and the real record down trends were actually set in 1999, 2003 and 1984. While the record uptrends were in 2007, 2008 and 1996.


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Lars
February 3, 2009 7:29 pm

Jeff, I hope you will post on the correlation, if any, between North Pole temperatures and Arctic Sea Ice extent.

Gina Becker
February 3, 2009 7:46 pm

Soot from Asia is settling all over the arctic ice. Look at satellite photos of the globe. It absorbs more radiation heat than white snow (albedo effect), causing melting of ice, exposing more of the darker oceans that absorb more radiation heat, etc.–but the CO2 alarmists are blaming it on, well, CO2, of course, which doesn’t stand up to physics calculations. I believe soot, plus the many “correction factors” that NASA and Hadley, et al, apply to all the data, account for all the perceived “global warming” trends.

Philip_B
February 3, 2009 7:46 pm

The NOAA global temperature anomaly is showing a huge +12C temperature anomaly for the North Pole. The same anomaly has persisted for the last week at least.
http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/map/images/rnl/sfctmpmer_07a.rnl.html
I don’t know iff this anomaly is real or an artifact of processing, given the poor to non-existent polar coverage of the satellites.
And, re the melting of ‘meters thick ice”. This is pure speculation. There is no data to support this conclusion, over the same time period as this analysis.

layne
February 3, 2009 8:00 pm

I just LOVE that the warming Fanatics are stopping by to explicate their theories. It signifies the attention this site is getting, and the impact it is exerting on the fantasy “consensus”.
DJ…. news flash: All increases in ice footprint BEGIN as NEW ice. … mainly because they are…. well, …. NEW. 🙂
I plan to construct a 10 ft tall carbon edifice of Al Gore in my back yard this summer, (or, extension of spring if the last two years are any indication) …. and I will invite channel 4 to witness as we douse Al, el-Carbon, in gas, and set him alite. Then, we’ll spin brodies around him with our SUVs in the hope this will generate enough C02 to keep us from another Maunder event. 🙂
Cheers!

JohnD
February 3, 2009 8:14 pm

I stand by my previous perdiction (as best I can remember it…):
Artic sea ice crosses the equator by March 1, 2009, 4:15AM local time!

February 3, 2009 8:15 pm

Wally (18:48:28): Cool blog, Wally. Thanks for the link. Would you take a moment to add it to your information when submitting here so we can simply click your name to go there? Anthony generously makes this option available to all contributors.

G Alston
February 3, 2009 8:20 pm

DJ — Of course, your replacing metres thick once permanent ice with very thin seasonal ice and as a result the volume is a fraction of what it was.
This sounds like conjecture, not science. First, there’s no guarantee that seasonal ice will be thin. There’s compaction to deal with. It compresses. And in so doing it gets thick in places. Second, I don’t know for a fact that ice that is thick necessarily melts slower if the melting is caused by ocean current and happening from underneath. It sounds reasonable, but sounds = assumption. Assumption isn’t data. Third, this is precisely the argument forwarded by the alarmist crowd in 2008 that claimed that the 2008 melt would make the record 2007 melt pale in comparison. And we know how _that_ turned out.
In short, your statement has the all-too-familiar ring of “proof by repeated assertion,” which seems to be the primary tool of the alarmist’s debating arsenal.
Got anything original or is this a retread?

February 3, 2009 8:22 pm

Jeff Id,
I got the blink graph from this site, but I’m sorry to say I didn’t record its provenance. Let that be a lesson to me. Maybe if someone recalls it we can find out who composed it.

Pamela Gray
February 3, 2009 8:26 pm

Philip B – Yes there is. There is a stalled warm jet stream anomaly next to Greenland. It is pulling warmer air and fairly strong winds from further south into the Arctic circle. I predict ice changes (downward extent trend and lower ice concentrations) until this area clears out.

Pamela Gray
February 3, 2009 8:30 pm

Jet stream area that is. The ice will rebuild, both in terms of concentration and extent, quickly, once the cold air is allowed to circulate once again in its normal pattern. The jet stream affect can be very powerful up there, along with warm and cold oceanic currents.

February 3, 2009 9:12 pm

DJ (18:21:21) :
Of course, your replacing metres thick once permanent ice with very thin seasonal ice and as a result the volume is a fraction of what it was. Except that when the following seasonal melt is less than the result is a net gain. With a repeat you then have the beginnings of a new (and extended) multi-year field. The current pattern seems to indicate that the ‘guess’ the models made was incorrect.

Jiminindy
February 3, 2009 9:14 pm

An ice-free pole should be no surprise, due to axial tilt. Cloud cover over the Arctic is random, as are the ocean currents. The non-variable affecting melting is solar radiation which has maximum impact on the (nearly) unmoving polar ice.

Editor
February 3, 2009 9:15 pm

Grant Hodges (19:28:04) :
“your replacing metres thick once permanent ice ” –
If there were really such a thing as permanent ice, we could build things up there, leave for the winter and come back and find them next fall. I bet you can’t.

The condition of permanent sea ice at the North Pole happens during ice ages. The thing that causes interglacials is the melting of the North Polar ice. As soon as the ice is persisting through the arctic summers (plural, ‘permanent’), we are ‘on our way’ into the next glacial… See Milankovitch.
That the summer ice and snow sometimes melts is a Very Good Thing.
From “Ice Age” by John and Mary Gribbin):
Pg.53: […]the single most important thing to emerge from these discussions was Koppen’s realization of the key season in the Ice Age saga. Adhemar and Croll had thought that the decisive factor in encouraging Ice to spread across the Northern Hemisphere must be the occurrence of extremely cold winters, resulting in increased snowfall. At first, Milankovitch had shared this view. But it was Koppen who pointed out that it is always cold enough for snow to fall in the Arctic winter, even today, and that the reason that the Northern Hemisphere is not in the grip of a full Ice Age is because the ‘extra’ snow melts away again in the summer.
Pg 54: He reasoned that the way to encourage the ice to spread would be to have a reduction in summer warmth, because then less of the winter snowfall would melt. If less snow melted in summer than fell in winter, the ice sheets would grow – and once they had started to grow, the feedback effect of the way the ice and snow reflect away incoming solar energy would enhance the process.

Jarmo
February 3, 2009 9:19 pm

I just wonder about the ice situation during MWP if this study is to be trusted.
http://www.ulapland.fi/?newsid=6995&deptid=11589&languageid=4&news=1

Nick Yates
February 3, 2009 9:24 pm

DJ (18:21:21) :
This change is exactly as expected under global warming and will continue for a period while the Arctic switches from a perennial ice regime to a seasonal ice regime.
If the Arctic sea ice had never melted before then it would be kilometers thick by now. We only have to wait one year for first year ice to become perennial ice as it will do next year. Given that ice is good insulator, I wonder if the melting and reforming of the Arctic ice acts like a sort of thermostat allowing excess heat in the ocean to radiate away quickly following a natural warming period. There is also evidence that the Arctic ice cap has been smaller in the past than now, as seen on WUWT.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/10/21/researchers-find-arctic-may-have-had-less-ice-6-7000-years-ago/

AnonyMoose
February 3, 2009 9:31 pm

“This means their use of the monthly data to establish a monthly trend was in error …”
So what happens when one uses yearly data to establish a yearly trend?
Incidentally, the article text refers to Figures 1 and 4 without labeling the figures, assuming you’re referring to the figures in this article.

jarhead
February 3, 2009 9:33 pm

JohnD wrote
“I stand by my previous perdiction (as best I can remember it…):
Artic sea ice crosses the equator by March 1, 2009, 4:15AM local time!’
So What? I am sure this is consistent with the models.

Steve Keohane
February 3, 2009 9:46 pm

From what I’ve read the polar cap is ~20My old, ~ 0.5% of earth’s age. Seems abnormal to have any ice there at all.

Tim L
February 3, 2009 9:49 pm

TX, Jeff

Pieter F
February 3, 2009 9:52 pm

When I see a headline like, “. . . Fastest August Ice Retreat in History” I immediately wonder what notion of history is being applied — first signs of civilization, Adam and Eve, the invention of the thermometer, the birth of Swedish astronomer Anders Celsius, the baptism of Al Gore? When reading further and I find that, for the story, history began in 1980, I am immediately skeptical about the importance of the message. It effectively begins history concurrent with the late 20th Century warming and avoids the mid-20th Century cooling period. That’s deaky and snevious!
It reminds me of the early 2000 presidential campaign. In January of that year the US Weather Service announced that 1999 was the warmest since the agency had been keeping records. That was a fair enough statement as the agency began in 1817 and their data was known, though there was some discussion about the Urban Heat Island and its affect on the more recent data. Then the media got hold of the story and two national news organizations (ABC and CBS) reported, “According to government scientists, 1999 was the warmest on record.” It was only a day or two before a certain presidential candidate declared in a speech that 1999 “was the warmest in history.”
By nearly all recognized accounts the Medieval Climate Optimum, the rise of the Roman Empire, the heights of the Egyptian dynasties, and the heart of the Eemian Interglacial (when first signs of culture appear in the anthropological record) were all periods substantially warmer than now.
Can we be a little more careful on how we use the word ‘history’ or at least be clear about when history began within the context of a given story?

DR
February 3, 2009 10:06 pm

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/06/080620-north-pole.html
“We’re actually projecting this year that the North Pole may be free of ice for the first time [in history],”
The same arguments on thinning ice were used last year to justify such presumptuous hysteria, but nary a mention of what actually caused the low minimum in 2007.
These “scientists” can say whatever they want and never worry about accountability.

jorgekafkazar
February 3, 2009 10:08 pm

http://www.eoearth.org/article/State_of_the_Arctic_Report
“Data from submarine based observations indicate that at the end of the melt season the permanent ice cover…thinned by an average of 1.3 m between 1956–1978 and the 1990s, from 3.1 to 1.8 m. On the other hand, measurements of the seasonal ice cover (the ice around the periphery of the Arctic basin that melts during the summer) do not indicate any statistically significant change in thickness in recent decades (Melling et al., 2005; Haas, 2004; Polyakov et al., 2003).”

Richard111
February 3, 2009 10:14 pm

“Adjusting” the data has no effect on the real world. Beware when they put CO2 under legal control. There will be no single aspect of our lives that will not come under government scrutiny. 1984 is the “bible” of our current government.

John Nicklin
February 3, 2009 10:32 pm

a jones (19:21:59) :
“We do know courtesy of the Royal Navy and its nuclear boats [submarines] that since they first started to measure it in the late 1970’s the thickness of the Arctic ice has been declining. Likewise our satellite data only dates back to 1979.”

Unless those boats measured the ice at consistent locations. not necessarily the same lat and long since the ice moves, the data is of little value. So, if they deployed locator beacons at each measurement location and made all further lmeasurements based on those data points, the data might be valid. More likely, they were measuring the ice along their track which may have been different every voyage. Tim Ball has commented on this kind of evidence, he finds it to be of very little value.

RichardM
February 3, 2009 10:36 pm

Using the word “permanent” to describe Arctic ice was analogously captured by former President Clinton, “It depends on what is is.”
That ice isn’t permanent, but there is multi-year ice. It melts and migrates and is continuously renewed every winter (at least in our meager historical records). Even in them, we find that northern ice was “threatened” in the 30’s as the Soviets went looking for that fabled Northwest Passage. 2007 was an anomaly for sea ice extent, but the storms that compacted the ice? AGW as he cause for the “loss” of all that ice was thrust front and center.
Jeff, great job!!!