Polar scientists are calling for an urgent intensification of national and international research and observational capabilities in view of rapid Arctic and Antarctic change. The latest call to action is from the SCAR/CliC Expert Group on Antarctic Sea-Ice Processes & Climate (ASPeCt) and the CliC Arctic Sea Ice Working Group (ASIWG) in response to continuing observations of record low sea-ice extents, with the same messages heard strongly at the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting that concluded in Helsinki last week.

Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) Co-chair, Ed Hanna, responded by saying, "sea ice is a highly sensitive bellwether of the state of Earth’s climate, and as such is both a key impact and early harbinger of human-induced climate change. The recent changes reported in both Arctic and Antarctic sea ice, under the umbrella of SCAR/CliC’s Sea Ice Working Groups, are dramatic and concerning. Until the last few years, it was thought that Antarctica – at least its sea ice - was more insulated from the worst effects of global heating; unfortunately, it seems increasingly likely that this is no longer the case." 

Polar scientists are calling for sustained long-term observations and research to address information gaps in both polar sea-ice zones and increased collaboration across nations and through the standardization of sea-ice measurements. Please see the article published on the WMO website (link and full text below) and contact the experts listed there for comment or for further information. 

Petra Heil - sea ice

Photo: Petra Heil (Australian Antarctic Program)

Polar scientists call for urgent action in view of rapid Arctic and Antarctic change

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Polar scientists call for urgent action in view of rapid Arctic and Antarctic change

Polar scientists are calling for an urgent intensification of national and international research and observational capabilities in view of rapid Arctic and Antarctic change.

Sea ice is reducing globally at an unprecedented rate, with serious implications for not only Earth’s polar environments and inhabitants but also global weather and climate.

In particular, Antarctic sea ice has declined since 2016 at a rate not observed since the beginning of satellite records in the 1970s - a phenomenon that is concerning the scientific community and one that is currently not well understood.

More than 60 experts from 41 institutions and 14 countries attended the annual meetings of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research/Climate and Cryosphere Sea Ice Working Group and the Arctic Sea Ice Working Group after a 4-year COVID-19 hiatus. Both groups are affiliated with the WMO co-sponsored World Climate Research Programme. The event was hosted by the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research.

It coincided with the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meeting hosted by Finland in Helsinki. WMO Secretary-General Prof. Petteri Taalas highlighted the central role of the Antarctic in the global climate system and the importance of reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. The concluding Helsinki Declaration on Climate Change in the Antarctic stressed the global implications of climate change and the need for urgent action to protect Antarctica.

Recent Antarctic and Arctic events

Antarctic sea-ice extent reached another record low in February 2023, following previous record lows of February 2017 and 2022. This prompts grave concerns about the change in the state of Antarctic sea ice within the wider Earth system. Even now as mid-winter approaches, Antarctic sea-ice extent remains at record low values.

In 2022, for the first time in the observational record, Antarctic landfast ice experienced a significant loss. Hence, some coastal regions are now ice-free where they never were observed to be before.

Observations from novel autonomous instrumentations indicate increased contributions from ocean-sea ice-atmosphere interactions, such as wave damping and ice breakup, in reshaping the Antarctic sea ice.

2023 continued a pattern of low Arctic sea ice minima. The last 16 years (2007-2022) are the lowest 16 years in the 44-year satellite record.

A notable ice-free area opened near the North Pole in July 2022 and persisted for several weeks. Thinner, less compact sea ice has continued to replace older, thicker ice in this region over the last several years.

Call to immediate action

The polar scientists called for sustained long-term observatories and research to fill the information gaps in both polar sea-ice zones. Multi-national design and coordination are required to optimize field observations and research synthesis, as well as to deliver robust and impactful outcomes. These will provide information to increase our collective knowledge of Earth system processes.

There should be increased climate model-observation collaborations through the standardization of sea-ice measurements, the standardization of data representation and establishment of sea-ice Essential Climate Variables (ECVs), along-side ocean and atmosphere ECVs.

Expert contacts

Dr. Petra Heil for Antarctic Sea-Ice [E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; Ph: +49 151 2366 5266] & Dr. Melinda Webster for Arctic Sea-Ice [E: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.; Ph + 1 918 607 8874]

The Expert Group on Antarctic Sea-Ice Processes & Climate (ASPeCt) was founded in 1996 to improve our understanding of the Antarctic sea-ice zone through focussed and ongoing field programs, remote sensing and numerical modelling. ASPeCt members hail largely from the science community. ASPeCt is an Expert Group under the Scientific Committee for Antarctic Research (SCAR) and is co-sponsored by WCRP's Climate and Cryosphere (CliC) Core Project. For more information about ASPeCt refer to https://aspect.antarctica.gov.au.

The Arctic Sea Ice Working Group (ASIWG) was founded in 2007 and concentrates on improving the coordination between the sea-ice observation and modelling communities to establish protocols for standardizing and archiving data across the different national and international activities. ASIWG is sponsored by CliC. For more information about ASIWG refer to https://climate-cryosphere.org/arctic-sea-ice-wg.