Video follows.

The length of the melt season for Arctic sea ice is growing by several days each decade, and an earlier start to the melt season is allowing the Arctic Ocean to absorb enough additional solar radiation in some places to melt as much as four feet of the Arctic ice cap’s thickness, according to a new study by National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) and NASA researchers.
Arctic sea ice has been in sharp decline during the last four decades. The sea ice cover is shrinking and thinning, making scientists think an ice-free Arctic Ocean during the summer might be reached this century. The seven lowest September sea ice extents in the satellite record have all occurred in the past seven years.
“The Arctic is warming and this is causing the melt season to last longer,” said Julienne Stroeve, a senior scientist at NSIDC, Boulder and lead author of the new study, which has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research Letters. “The lengthening of the melt season is allowing for more of the sun’s energy to get stored in the ocean and increase ice melt during the summer, overall weakening the sea ice cover.”
To study the evolution of sea ice melt onset and freeze-up dates from 1979 to the present day, Stroeve’s team used passive microwave data from NASA’s Nimbus-7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer, and the Special Sensor Microwave/Imager and the Special Sensor Microwave Imager and Sounder carried onboard Defense Meteorological Satellite Program spacecraft.
When ice and snow begin to melt, the presence of water causes spikes in the microwave radiation that the snow grains emit, which these sensors can detect. Once the melt season is in full force, the microwave emissivity of the ice and snow stabilizes, and it doesn’t change again until the onset of the freezing season causes another set of spikes. Scientists can measure the changes in the ice’s microwave emissivity using a formula developed by Thorsten Markus, co-author of the paper and chief of the Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
Results show that although the melt season is lengthening at both ends, with an earlier melt onset in the spring and a later freeze-up in the fall, the predominant phenomenon extending the melting is the later start of the freeze season. Some areas, such as the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas, are freezing up between six and 11 days later per decade. But while melt onset variations are smaller, the timing of the beginning of the melt season has a larger impact on the amount of solar radiation absorbed by the ocean, because its timing coincides with when the sun is higher and brighter in the Arctic sky.
Despite large regional variations in the beginning and end of the melt season, the Arctic melt season has lengthened on average by five days per decade from 1979 to 2013.
Still, weather makes the timing of the autumn freeze-up vary a lot from year to year.
“There is a trend for later freeze-up, but we can’t tell whether a particular year is going to have an earlier or later freeze-up,” Stroeve said. “There remains a lot of variability from year to year as to the exact timing of when the ice will reform, making it difficult for industry to plan when to stop operations in the Arctic.”
To measure changes in the amount of solar energy absorbed by the ice and ocean, the researchers looked at the evolution of sea surface temperatures and studied monthly surface albedo data (the amount of solar energy reflected by the ice and the ocean) together with the incoming solar radiation for the months of May through October. The albedo and sea surface temperature data the researchers used comes from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s polar-orbiting satellites.
They found that the ice pack and ocean waters are absorbing more and more sunlight due both to an earlier opening of the waters and a darkening of the sea ice. The sea ice cover is becoming less reflective because it now mostly consists of thinner, younger ice, which is less reflective than the older ice that previously dominated the ice pack. Also, the young ice is flatter, allowing the dark melt ponds that form at the early stages of the melt season are able to spread more widely, further lowering its albedo.
The researchers calculated the increase in solar radiation absorbed by the ice and ocean for the period ranging from 2007 to 2011, which in some areas of the Arctic Ocean exceed 300 to 400 megajoules per square meter, or the amount of energy needed to thin the ice by an additional 3.1 to 4.2 feet (97 to 130 centimeters).
The increases in surface ocean temperatures, combined with a warming Arctic atmosphere due to climate change, explain the delayed freeze up in the fall.
“If air and ocean temperatures are similar, the ocean is not going to lose heat to the atmosphere as fast as it would when the differences are greater,” said Linette Boisvert, co-author of the paper and a cryospheric scientist at Goddard. “In the last years, the upper ocean heat content is much higher than it used to be, so it’s going to take a longer time to cool off and for freeze up to begin.”
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I tend to take research done by Ms. Stroeve with a grain of skepticism, since she allows her work to be aided by political activists at Greenpeace.
This photo was taken on 09/11/2012:
Source: Greenpeace
But politics aside, more importantly, no evidence seems to be visible in common sea ice graphs like this one. In fact, the melt season started later than usual this year, according to NSIDC’s Arctic Sea Ice Extent Graph.
They did some CYA for that:
“There is a trend for later freeze-up, but we can’t tell whether a particular year is going to have an earlier or later freeze-up,”
Granted, the report mentions it to be mostly a regional effect, While there likely is some truth in the report, what isn’t explored is whether the cause of this change is part of a natural cycle, a natural cycle enhanced by some AGW effects, or purely an artifact of AGW.
Their claim…
The increases in surface ocean temperatures, combined with a warming Arctic atmosphere due to climate change, explain the delayed freeze up in the fall.
…reads like something Greenpeace would write, providing no other possibility. One thing I tend to notice about Earthly geological and atmospheric processes is that they tend to act on timespans than exceed human lifetimes, sometimes being orders of magnitudes longer. In the case of Arctic sea ice, a record going back to 1979 is shorter than that and only represent a fraction of what may be a natural cycle. Making claims that they know exactly what the cause is might very well bite them in a few years or few decades.
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Phil. says:
April 2, 2014 at 8:06 am
If you read the original post you’ll see that they aren’t using the Max and Min to define the melt season! They actually determine the date when ice surface starts to melt and the date when that water freezes.
————————
Max and Min dates tells you when the bulk or average of the Arctic is melting and freezing. It is the true accurate measure.
If one attempts to use any other method to measure melt starts and freeze starts, you are just cherrypicking a particular region (and not the whole Arctic) and/or one becomes greatly subject to confirmation bias.
When does the ice surface start to melt?
Well that depends on where you are to start with. The ice is melting constantly at the southern end of Greenland 365 days of the year. The Transpolar drift is constantly flushing ice out the Fram Strait to melt in the north Atlantic 365 days of the year. At the north pole, some ice never start to melt.
They are just playing around with cherrypicking methods.
———–
and any blog post about a study that has Julienne Stroeve as an author, is required to post a picture.
or a video.
“Despite large regional variations in the beginning and end of the melt season, the Arctic melt season has lengthened on average by five days per decade from 1979 to 2013.”
Large regional variations doesn’t suggest the primary driver is a uniform global driver like well mixed CO2.
“The increases in surface ocean temperatures, combined with a warming Arctic atmosphere due to climate change, explain the delayed freeze up in the fall.”
Combined with? I would have thought it a no brainer that the atmospheric temperature increase was “because of” increases in surface ocean temperatures. If thats the relationship then, atmospheric temperature increase is not likely to be the primary driver (or else it would be positive feedback with all that implies)
Bill Illis says:
April 2, 2014 at 6:16 pm
Phil. says:
April 2, 2014 at 8:06 am
If you read the original post you’ll see that they aren’t using the Max and Min to define the melt season! They actually determine the date when ice surface starts to melt and the date when that water freezes.
————————
Max and Min dates tells you when the bulk or average of the Arctic is melting and freezing. It is the true accurate measure.
It’s a measure of spread/compaction of the ice not melt and freeze. For example the sea ice to the north of Svalbard has expanded recently which doesn’t have much to do with freezing rather the breaking up of the ice and that being blown towards land.
See: http://lance-modis.eosdis.nasa.gov/cgi-bin/imagery/single.cgi?image=crefl1_143.A2014092153500-2014092154000.2km.jpg
If one attempts to use any other method to measure melt starts and freeze starts, you are just cherrypicking a particular region (and not the whole Arctic) and/or one becomes greatly subject to confirmation bias.
Clearly you haven’t read the paper, the results are shown for the whole arctic and the results for the different regions are discussed. Clearly using the max and min extent days tells you nothing about the time of melt in the central arctic whereas the satellite data does.
When does the ice surface start to melt?
Well that depends on where you are to start with. The ice is melting constantly at the southern end of Greenland 365 days of the year. The Transpolar drift is constantly flushing ice out the Fram Strait to melt in the north Atlantic 365 days of the year. At the north pole, some ice never start to melt.
They are just playing around with cherrypicking methods.
The paper is about sea ice not Greenland! Also the ice near the north pole frequently does melt here’s a shot from 85ºN last July:
http://publicradio1.wpengine.netdna-cdn.com/updraft/files/2013/07/CC-meltcam.jpg
I like “climate clamor” in place of “climate change.” “International Panel on Climate Clamor.”
Those would be a good centerpiece for a skeptical TV episode.
Maybe a photo-montage of several could be added to the Failed Predictions page.
The ice is melting constantly at the southern end of Greenland 365 days of the year. The Transpolar drift is constantly flushing ice out the Fram Strait to melt in the north Atlantic 365 days of the year. At the north pole, some ice never start to melt.
Dr. Strangelove and elmer – Strangely enough there are not “22 yachts that got stuck in ice while crossing the Northwest Passage last summer” and there never were. See e.g.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2014/03/28/latest-admission-from-nsidc-on-forecasting-sea-ice-extent-is-a-far-cry-from-arctic-death-spriral/#comment-1601177
et seq. if you don’t believe me.
@Snow White – Strangely the rest of the world disagrees with you.
http://www.seamagazine.com/News/Article/Northwest-Passage-blocked
http://bwsailing.com/cc/2013/09/04/north-west-passage-blocked-with-ice-yachts-caught/
But then you may be speaking “today” versus 6 months ago?
Phil – The rest of the world merely regurgitates previous inaccurate regurgitations of Doug Pohl’s original article. Here’s a close up view of a so called “ice bound yacht” in the Northwest Passage at the end of September 2013:
http://econnexus.org/tara-reaches-open-waters-of-lancaster-sound/
@Snow White – do you have a reading problem? Just curious.
last I checked, September had 30 days. The 4th is not the end.
Seems the rest of the world knows how to read better than you.
Phil – Did you bother reading anything at that link? The point being there was no “freeze-up” and hence no need for any “emergency rescue operation” even at the end of September. If you’re only interested in the state of the ice in the Northwest Passage on September 4th 2013 try reading the contents of this link instead:
http://econnexus.org/the-northwest-passage-in-2013/
There’s plenty of pictures if reading is too much trouble for you!
Did you go to the links Snow white? Seems you are trying to say today is yesterday.
Read the reports. Not what was 30 days later.
Snow White,
Let’s cut to the chase: there is nothing being observed now that is not fully explained by natural variability. Nothing.
Further, the Arctic has been ice free in the past, during the current Holocene. At times when CO2 was very low. It will happen again.
It is amazing, the number of lemmings who believe that every tick and wiggle in an Arctic ice chart proves that a) humans are responsible, and b) that more money must be wasted on things that will make zero difference.
Try thinking for yourself, if possible, instead of being led by the nose by people who are pushing a self-serving agenda. Because if you don’t think for yourself, you are part of the problem.
Dr. Strangelove says:
April 1, 2014 at 8:32 pm
Julienne Stroeve
I suggest you ask the sailors of the 22 yachts that got stuck in ice while crossing the Northwest Passage last summer in the Arctic Sea. They say there is 60% more sea ice than previous year.
It didn’t happen so you won’t find those sailors!
The article did not refer to ’22 yachts that got stuck in ice while crossing the NW Passage’, the article claimed that the NW Passage was blocked with ice at each end and named 22 vessels that were in there, including 3 rowboats, a kayak and jet skis!
“There are a number of yachts known to be in the Cambridge Bay area heading west: ACALEPHE (CA), ISATIS (NEW CALEDONIA), LA BELLE EPOQUE (DE), LIBELLULE (CHE), NOEME (FRA), and TRAVERSAY III (CA). PAS PERDU LE NORD (DE) was ahead by 10 days and has already gone on to Arctic Alaska waters. While BALTHAZAR (CA) departed from Inuvik a month ago and is now on the hard in Nome Alaska.”
So at the time of the article two of those were already out of the Arctic, I have been unable to find information about NOEME but all the rest successfully transited the NW Passage, and weren’t ‘stuck in the ice’.
traveling in the other direction: “ANNA (?), rowboat ARCTIC JOULE (CA), DODO’S DELIGHT (GBR), EMPIRICUS (USA). rowboat FAIRMONT’s PASSION (USA), tandem-kayak IKIMAYIA (CA), in Russian sea ice is LADY DANA (POL), POLAR BOUND (GBR), rowboat ROWING ICE (FRA), in Russian sea ice is TARA (FRA), and a group of jetskis known as DANGEROUS WATERS (USA) reported east of Gjoa Haven.
Several updates on known others:
LE MANGUIER (FRA) is wintering over in the ice at Paulatuk. Motor Yacht Lady M II (Marshal Islands) was escorted by CCGS icebreaker HENRY LARSEN through Bellot Strait eastbound on 20130824.”
Of those: DODO’S DELIGHT (GBR) successfully transited the Arctic despite losing a generator en route, along with ANNA, EMPIRICUS (USA) stayed in Cambridge bay, LADY DANA (POL) was actually transiting the Northern sea route and stayed in Vancouver rather than continue via the NW passage, POLAR BOUND (GBR) successfully transited the arctic, TARA (FRA) was attempting to sail both the Northern sea route and the NW Passage in one season which they successfully completed, they arrived in France in early December.
ARCTIC TERN (GBR) and TOOLUKA (NED) turned back without entering the NW Passage. LE MANGUIER (FRA) is a converted tugboat which has spent several years cruising around the Arctic, no reason to believe that they were intending to not overwinter up there.
So of the yachts mentioned in that article, none were stuck in the ice and two overwintered there, the rest completed their journeys with one unknown.
I hope that clears things up, hopefully we won’t hear any more tall tales about ’22 yachts stuck in ice’.
Re: dbstealey says:
April 4, 2014 at 11:53 am
What’s any of that go to do with what Phil (#2) refers to as “tall tales about ’22 yachts stuck in ice’”?
Do you “think for yourself”, or do you believe everything you read at the so called “Real Science”, or in here for that matter?
@Snow White – there is no Phil #2. Do you lie as a matter of habit or for fun?
philjourdan says:
April 4, 2014 at 1:47 pm
@Snow White – there is no Phil #2. Do you lie as a matter of habit or for fun?
For some reason my post indicating that snow white was clearly referring to my post as Phil (#2) has disappeared.
Phil. says:
April 4, 2014 at 12:05 pm
@Phil. – Your missing comment seems to have magically reappeared this morning (UTC)!
@philjourdan – Repeating a lie an infinite number of times does not magically turn it into the truth. There never were “22 yachts that got stuck in ice while crossing the Northwest Passage last summer”. Many people may have said “there is 60% more sea ice than previous year”, but that:
wasn’t true either:
http://GreatWhiteCon.info/2013/09/60-per-cent-of-nothing/