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Arctic losing its old, thick, long-term ice cover – faster

18/3/2008 BBC The Arctic is losing its old, thick ice faster than in previous years, according to satellite data.
   The loss has continued since the end of the Arctic summer, despite  cold weather across the northern hemisphere.  The warm 2007 summer saw the smallest area of ice ever recorded in  the region, and scientists say 2008 could follow a similar pattern.   Older floes are thicker and less saline than newly-formed ice,  meaning they can survive warm spells better. 
    It is not likely that perennial ice will recover in the long term .   Josefino Comiso, Nasa.
 Ice more than two years old now makes up about 30% of all the ice in the Arctic, down from 60% two decades ago.  The shrinking of Arctic ice has global implications, as its white  surface reflects solar energy back into space whereas the open ocean  absorbs it. 
March is the month when the Arctic ice usually reaches its largest extent, as the dark winter nears its end.   Nasa’s data shows the area covered by ice is roughly the same as it 
 was last year; but this masks a significant change.    “Although this March the area is slightly larger than last March, the area of [thick] perennial ice has reached an all time low,” said  Seelye Martin, manager of the Cryospheric Sciences Program at Nasa             headquarters in Washington DC.  “So the volume of Arctic ice continues to decrease.   The proportion of old ice covering the Arctic has fallen markedly.     The loss of old, thick ice has continued through the winter months, despite the unusually cold weather deriving from La Nina conditions (the other extreme of the El Nino Southern Oscillation) in the 
 Pacific.  The winter ice loss is thought to be driven mainly by the transport of old floes from Arctic waters out into the Atlantic Ocean. The currents driving this are stronger than usual as a consequence of  another natural cycle, the Arctic Oscillation. 
The net result is that most of the cover consists of ice that has formed since last summer. 
The scientists behind these findings believe this year’s cooling should not obscure the long term warming trend, with temperatures  across the Arctic rising about twice as fast as the global average. ”Weather comes and goes, and it’s the long term average that really             matters,” observed Josefino Comiso from Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Center. 
Dr Comiso said he believed that the change of albedo – the change from a white, reflective surface of ice to a dark, absorbing surface of sea – was already happening. 
 With the ice pack containing such a high proportion of thin, salty ice, the scientists believe another major melt is likely in the summer.

Summer ice cover in the Arctic has declined sharply “It’s becoming thinner and thinner and much more susceptible to melting during the summer – much more likely to melt away,”  commented Walt Meier from the National Snow and Ice Data Center  (NSIDC) in Boulder.   “It may look OK on the surface, but it’s like looking at a Hollywood movie set – you see the facade of a building and it looks OK, but if you look behind it, there’s no building there.”   Last summer, the sharp melt meant that the Northwest Passage, the      fabled navigation route linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans  across the top of North America, was easily navigable.   The disappeance of ice cover has countries around the Arctic eagerly  eyeing the mineral reserves that may become accessible.   Most projections of climate change in the Arctic suggest the ocean may become ice-free by the middle of the century, but one forecast released late last year said it could happen by 2013.

Go to http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/hi/sci/tech/7303385.stm