Arctic sea ice extent has fallen strongly over the past few weeks and looks set to keep falling rapidly over the next few months.
Ocean heat is at record levels, as illustrated by the image below and as discussed in an earlier post.
The image below shows the temperature at the North Pole reaching 0.7°C or 33.3°F (at 1000 hPa, at the green circle) on March 16, 2022, with ocean currents depicted at the background.
Furthermore, the Gulf Stream is pushing huge amounts of ocean heat toward the Arctic.
The image below shows that, on March 16, 2022, the temperature in the Arctic was 3.5°C higher than 1979-2000.
Below, a Climate Reanalyzer forecast for March 18, 2022, of very high temperature anomalies over Antarctica combined with a forecast of a diversion over Antarctica of the Southern Polar Jet Stream (wind at 250 hPa).
What causes such distortions of the Jet Stream?
• Emissions by people heat up the air, and heat up oceans and make winds stronger, as discussed in an earlier post.
• Another mechanism affecting the Jet Stream is that, as oceans heat up, the temperature difference between land and oceans widens both in Summer and in Winter and this can cause the Jet Stream to divert deeper from the narrow path it used to follow, as discussed in an earlier post.
• What especially affects the Jet Stream on the Northern Hemisphere is that, as the Arctic gets hit hard by temperature rises, the temperature difference narrows between the Arctic and the Equator, slowing the Jet Stream; this can prolong and amplify extreme weather events.
The above events could be seen as signs of the strength and the speed of the rise to come.
Rise due to La Niña and high sunspots
The highest temperature anomalies have over the years shown up at the highest latitudes North, i.e. the Arctic Ocean, in particular during El Niño periods.
For comparison, the next image on the right shows a temperature anomaly (vs 1979-2000) of 7.7°C for the Arctic as a whole on November 18, 2016, when there was an El Niño.
As the temperature keeps rising, ever more frequent strong El Niño events are likely to occur, as discussed in an earlier post. Furthermore, a 2019 study analyzes how tipping the ENSO into a permanent El Niño can trigger state transitions in global terrestrial ecosystems, as mentioned in an earlier post.
Currently, the temperature rise is additionally suppressed by low sunspots. Within a few years time, sunspots can be expected to reach the peak of their current cycle. Observed sunspots look stronger than predicted, as described at the sunspots page. According to IPCC AR4, warming by solar irradiance ranges from 0.06 to 0.3 W/m².
[ from the Extinction page ] |
One of these elements causing the temperature to rise is the falling away of sulfate aerosols, while there could be a further temperature rise due to releases of other aerosols that have a net warming impact, such as black and brown carbon, which can increase dramatically as more wood burning and forest fires take place.
What could further push up temperatures a lot over the next few years is the compound impact of feedbacks in the Arctic, including decline of the snow and ice cover, releases of greenhouse gases from degrading subsea and terrestrial permafrost, and further distortion of the Jet Stream causing more extreme weather events.
The situation is dire and calls for the most comprehensive and effective action, as described at the Climate Plan.
Links
https://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2022/02/albedo-loss-in-antarctica.html
• NSIDC – Charctic interactive Sea Ice Graph
https://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/charctic-interactive-sea-ice-graph
• Nullschool.net
• Climate Reanalyzer
https://climatereanalyzer.org
• Accelerating loss of global snow and ice cover
https://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2022/02/accelerating-loss-of-global-snow-and-ice-cover.html
• Why stronger winds over the North Atlantic are so dangerous
• Human Extinction by 2022?
• More Extreme Weather
https://arctic-news.blogspot.com/2021/02/more-extreme-weather.html
• NASA Temperature Analysis
https://data.giss.nasa.gov/gistemp
• Historical change of El Niño properties sheds light on future changes of extreme El Niño – by Bin Wang et al.
• Tipping the ENSO into a permanent El Niño can trigger state transitions in global terrestrial ecosystems – by Mateo Duque-Villegas et al.
• Accelerating loss of global snow and ice cover
https://arctic-news.blogspot.com/p/climateplan.html