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Arctic ice nearing record low

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Paris, France

A new record low could soon be set for ice in the Arctic. The past five years have seen the lowest extent of sea ice since satellite measurements began in the 1970s.

Earth observing satellites are making it possible to measure the amount of sea ice in inaccessible areas such as the Arctic. This year, the extent of Arctic sea ice is comparable to the record low set in 2007. According to scientists at the University of Bremen in Germany, sea ice extent in early September has dropped below even that record.ย  Their maps are based on observations made by Japanโ€™s microwave sensor on NASAโ€™s Aqua satellite. ESAโ€™s SMOS mission is providing
complementary information on sea-ice cover and the thickness of thin ice.
According to other teams, like the US National Snow and Ice Data Center, the 2007 record has not yet been reached but is very close. International teams use various methods to measure sea ice based on different satellite observations, but the slight differences in their results are trivial.ย 

โ€œIt seems to be clear that this is a further consequence of the man-made global warming with global consequences,โ€ said Dr Georg Heygster from the University of Bremen. โ€œDirectly, the livelihoods of small animals, algae, fish and mammals โ€“ like polar bears and seals โ€“ are further reduced,โ€ he added.ย 

Scientists had been anticipating this yearโ€™s potential for a new record because satellites have seen the rare occurrence of two major shipping routes in the Arctic Ocean open simultaneously in August โ€“ indicating a significant reduction in sea-ice cover. During the last 30 years, satellites observing the Arctic have witnessed a halving of the minimum ice extent at the end of summer from around 8 million sq km in the early 1980s to 2007โ€™s historic minimum of just over 4 million sq km.

Source: European Space Agency