Elsevier

Remote Sensing of Environment

Volume 267, 15 December 2021, 112753
Remote Sensing of Environment

Sea ice extents continue to set new records: Arctic, Antarctic, and global results

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2021.112753Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Arctic sea ice extents set 93 monthly 11 yearly record lows post-1986, 0 record highs.

  • Highs dominated Antarctic sea ice extent records until 2016, followed by lows.

  • Since 2015, global sea ice extents have set new monthly record lows for all 12 months.

  • During 1979–2020, Arctic September sea ice extents varied 53%, March extents only 12%.

  • During 1979–2020, global yearly average sea ice extents varied by only 12%.

Abstract

The multi-channel satellite passive-microwave record of Earth's sea ice coverage, extending back to the late 1970s, has long revealed declining sea ice coverage in the Arctic but through 2015 revealed an overall increase rather than decrease in Antarctic sea ice coverage. Following major decreases in Antarctic sea ice since 2015, the 42-year 1979–2020 satellite dataset now shows recent losses in sea ice coverage in both hemispheres, and this is convincingly demonstrated by the enumeration of monthly and yearly record high and record low sea ice extents experienced over the course of the 42 years. In fact, one of the most convincing statistics on the declining Arctic sea ice cover is the fact that since 1986 the Arctic has not experienced a single monthly record high sea ice extent in any month but has experienced 93 monthly record lows. In contrast, all 12 calendar months have their 42-year Antarctic monthly record high sea ice extents in the period 2007–2015, while 8 of the 12 calendar months have had Antarctic record lows since 2015. Globally, every calendar month has registered a new monthly record low within the past 5 years. These results are complemented (and somewhat tempered) by quantification of the range of monthly and yearly sea ice extent values over the 42 years. For instance, although the Arctic's lowest September monthly average sea ice extent (in 2012) is 53% lower than its highest September monthly average sea ice extent (in 1980), the other months have far smaller percent differences between their lowest and highest Arctic values. For yearly average sea ice extents, the Arctic's lowest value (in 2020) is 18% lower than its highest value (in 1982), the Antarctic's lowest value (in 2017) is 16% lower than its highest value (in 2014), and the global lowest value (in 2019) is only 12% lower than its highest value (in 1982).

Keywords

Sea ice
Arctic sea ice
Antarctic sea ice
Global sea ice
Sea ice record highs and lows
Satellite remote sensing
Climate change

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