Arctic Sea Ice: Arctic sea ice heading for one of lowest winter peaks on record: Report

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Arctic sea ice heading for one of lowest winter peaks on record: Report
AI image (Picture credit: OpenAI via ChatGPT)

Arctic sea ice is on track to record one of its smallest winter peaks since satellite monitoring began four decades ago, raising fresh concerns about climate change and its geopolitical implications, according to data reviewed by news agency AFP.Figures from the National Snow and Ice Data Center show that Arctic sea ice extent reached nearly 14.22 million square kilometres on March 10. If the current trend continues until the winter maximum later this month, the level could rank among the five lowest ever recorded.Sea ice forms when ocean water freezes during winter and melts during summer. However, the total amount of ice returning each winter has been steadily declining due to human-driven global warming.

Risk of record-low winter peak

Seamus McAfee said the situation could still change slightly, but current data suggests the Arctic is approaching a historically low winter extent.“But so far, it is looking like it could be a very significant extent, perhaps one of, if not the lowest, in the record,” McAfee said, as quoted by AFP.Last year, Arctic sea ice reached its lowest winter maximum on March 22, covering 14.31 million square kilometres, according to the NSIDC. Previous lows were recorded in 2016, 2017 and 2018.Samantha Burgess said the 2026 level would likely fall within the five lowest years on record.Meanwhile, polar oceanographer Gilles Garric said the current winter was already among the “top three” lowest levels so far.

Arctic warming far faster than global average

Scientists say the shrinking ice cover reflects a broader warming trend in the Arctic.The last three years have been the hottest globally on record as greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise. The Arctic is warming significantly faster than the rest of the planet.“Given that the Arctic is warming at 3–4 times the global average rate, we are likely to continue to observe continued Arctic warming, loss of multi-year ice,” Burgess told AFP.Experts also warn that the return of the El Nino later this year could further push global temperatures higher.Low winter sea ice levels could also accelerate melting during the summer months.

Threat to ecosystems and wildlife

Although melting sea ice does not directly raise sea levels, unlike melting glaciers or ice sheets, scientists warn that the loss of frozen ocean cover threatens fragile polar ecosystems.Species such as the polar bear and emperor penguin depend on sea ice for breeding, hunting and survival.Shaye Wolf warned the shrinking ice cover could signal deeper climate dangers.“The sirens are blaring that we’re headed for a hothouse planet with massive devastation around the world,” Wolf told AFP.“But Arctic warming, driven by fossil fuels, puts us all in peril. We’re closer than ever to irreversible tipping points that will forever alter the world we know.”Despite the Arctic hitting a record low, Antarctica saw an improvement as its sea ice extent approached its typical summer average following four years of significant lows, according to a report from the NSIDC.

Melting ice reshaping geopolitics

Beyond environmental risks, the loss of Arctic ice is also reshaping global geopolitics.As ice retreats, new shipping lanes and access to untapped mineral and energy resources could emerge across the region.Elizabeth Chalecki said the melting Arctic could transform the region into a contested maritime zone.“From a geopolitical perspective, the climate change-induced melting of sea ice is turning the Arctic into the new Mediterranean: a common shared maritime resource surrounded by competing states,” she told AFP.Russia is already expanding its economic and military presence along the Northern Sea Route, while the United States and Canada may need to increase their activity in the region.Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump has previously voiced interest in acquiring Greenland, arguing the Arctic territory holds strategic importance amid growing competition with Russia and China.Scientists warn that while new economic opportunities may emerge from the melting ice, the environmental consequences could be far more severe if global emissions are not rapidly reduced.

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