Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Sea Ice Update

The extreme cold over southern Yukon is making headlines at the moment - and deservedly so, given how persistent it is - but for balanced perspective it's also worth considering the remarkable warmth in the Arctic in recent months.  Rick Thoman notes in his latest post that Arctic sea ice extent is running at a record low for the time of year, as it has been since late November:


Zack Labe's splendid graphic highlights the anomaly:



The largest deficits are found to the east and north of Svalbard, where ice-free waters extend to nearly 85°N, according to the NSIDC analysis.  This is pretty remarkable in late December:



It might be counter-intuitive given the preponderance of cold in Alaska, but Bering Sea ice is also below normal, mostly because of ice deficits in the central and western Bering Sea.  There is pretty good ice cover to the east of St Lawrence Island:


The warm anomaly in the Arctic has been ongoing since the height of summer.  Of course most recent years have been warmer than earlier decades, but the latter half of 2025 has been particularly unusual:




No comments:

Post a Comment