The shrinking of Arctic-wide September sea ice extent is often cited as an indicator of modern climate change; however, the timing of seasonal sea ice retreat/advance and the length of the open-water period are often more relevant to stakeholders working at regional and local scales. Here we highlight changes in regional open-water periods at multiple warming thresholds. We show that, in the latest generation of models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6), the open-water period lengthens by 63 days on average with 2 °C of global warming above the 1850-1900 average, and by over 90 days in several Arctic seas. Nearly the entire Arctic, including the Transpolar Sea Route, has at least 3 months of open water per year with 3.5 °C warming, and at least 6 months with 5 °C warming. Model bias compared to satellite data suggests that even such dramatic projections may be conservative. In several of the Arctic ocean basins, the period of open water without sea-ice cover will lengthen by more than 90 days under 2 oC of global warming, suggest analyses of the latest (CMIP6) climate model simulations.
Field label
Study/Dataset Example
Format
PDF
Datastore active
False
Datastore contains all records of source file
False
Has views
True
Id
2df697ab-2611-49de-a071-e3d66a7d0455
Mimetype
application/pdf
Package id
5ebc7aff-4761-4a39-a922-7dd2bc309c31
Position
0
Rescategory
documents
Size
3.8 MiB
State
active
Url type
upload