This figure illustrates the extent to which Arctic sea ice is melting faster than projected by computer models. The dotted line represents the average rate of melting indicated by computer models, with the blue area indicating the spread among the different models (shown as plus/minus one standard deviation). The red line shows the actual rate of Arctic ice loss based on observations. The observations have been particularly accurate since 1979 because of new satellite technology. (Illustration by Steve Deyo, ©UCAR, based on research by NSIDC and NCAR. News media terms of use*)
For those of you new to the global warming debate, the extent of polar ice coverage is critical to keeping temperatures low, because the ice is more reflective than the Earth or ocean beneath it. If the polar ice melts faster than expected, the bare earth or liquid water will absorb even more solar radiation and global temperatures will therefore increase faster than expected as well. This, of course, will melt more ice even faster, creating a positive feedback loop that will even further accelerate climate change.
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when we met in New York in March, you had mentioned the global warming debate was still up for discussion- based on data. Have you changed your stance on that?
In the (I know, highly controversial) Gore movie, this was some of the most compelling evidence they gave- and he used de-classified military info to illustrate his point. Submarines track the layer of arctic ice so they know where its thin to surface up….our own military has hard data that shows its increasingly thin each year on the whole cap
Hey Michelle,
Yeah, I think that the latest IPCC research results pretty much remove any remaining doubt. Go back and check my earlier post on a Global Warming Update.