Sea Ice Outlook | 2009 OutlookReports: June | July | August | September | Minimum | Summary Report September Sea Ice Outlook: July ReportReport Released: 16 July 2009
FULL REPORTResultsWe would like to welcome five new groups to the 2009 Outlook. We received 15 responses for the September Outlook based on June data (Figure 1). Most estimates for September sea ice extent are in a narrow range of 4.4 to 5.2 million square kilometers, as were last month's (based on May data). However, two new responses come in at 4.0 and 4.2 million square kilometers, which would represent a new record minimum. As the submitted uncertainty standard deviations are about 0.4 million square kilometers, most of the Outlook estimates overlap. All Outlook sea ice extent estimates for September 2009 are much lower than the past climatological extent of 6.7 million square kilometers. Although there is general consensus in the September Outlook for either persistent conditions or a slight increase over the 2008 sea ice extent, Outlook contributions which provide probabilistic assessments indicate about a 20% chance of reaching a new September sea ice minimum in 2009. Qualitatively, the June and early July sea ice data suggest a "bimodal" Outlook. Multi-year sea ice has been reduced to such low levels that the overall September sea ice extent is largely tied to the fate of the first-year sea ice, which appears thin or with low concentrations away from the central Arctic (see AMSR satellite data and the calculations by Lindsay and Rigor). Depending on August conditions, much of this first-year sea ice could either melt out by September or survive the summer as a vast expanse of thin sea ice. Please refer to page six of this report for Figure 1.
Figure 1. Distribution of individual outlook values for Assessment of Extremes in September ExtentWhile we are asking for expected values of the ice extent for September, most researchers recognize that any quantitative outlook should ideally include a probabilistic approach. This summer, most Outlooks indicate a persistence of conditions from 2008, placing the September 2009 sea ice extent close to the value of 2008. At the same time, the probability of a new record minimum extent is also of interest and significance according to some contributors. Estimates of the standard deviation of Outlook values for September 2009 run at 0.3, 0.4, 0.4, 0.5, and 0.5 million square kilometers. Applying these standard deviations to the consensus Outlook value of 4.6 million square kilometers, there is about a 16% chance that the estimate could be near the 2007 record value and about a 40% chance of there being sea ice greater than the 2008 value. There is virtually no chance of returning to previous 1990s sea ice conditions. The modeling groups often run their predictions starting with spring 2009 sea ice conditions and a range of potential summer 2009 weather conditions supplied from previous years (called ensemble members). Based on this approach, the AWI group says that there is either a 5% or 36% chance (depending on which method is employed) that the September 2009 sea ice will be below the 2007 extent and thus set a new record. The SMHI group finds a 28% chance of setting a new record minimum sea ice extent and Zhang states that there is a 2 in 9 (22%) chance of setting a new record. The NIC group has what they call an "aggressive" projection, which decreased from a value of 3.2 million square kilometers based on May data to a value of 2.9 million square kilometers based on June data. Further, 2 of the 16 (13%) Outlook estimates suggest the possibility of new record sea ice extent minimum. Taken together, these multiple approaches imply about a 20% chance of setting a new record in September 2009. Climate Data for June 2009 and Weather Outlook for JulyThe NSIDC sea ice extent chart for 5 July (Figure 2) shows less than median sea ice extents north of Alaska, in the Barents Sea, and in Baffin Bay. The AMSR-E image for 5 July (http://www.iup.uni-bremen.de:8084/amsr/amsre.html) is similar in extent and also shows lower ice concentrations in the Canadian Beaufort Sea and north along 130° E. The time history of extent (NSIDC, Figure 3) indicates that there was a rapid decrease in area during May to a value near the 2007 trajectory in early June, but without a repeat of the rapid loss in 2007 at the end of June. The ice mass buoys (Perovich) recorded some bottom melt at the southern most sites in the Beaufort Sea. The buoys and the web camera at the North Pole Environmental Observatory site (Morison) showed a late beginning of snow melt at the end of June (Figure 4).
Figure 2. Sea ice extent from NSIDC.
Figure 3. Time history of 2009 sea ice extent.
Figure 4. Web camera image for 26 June near the North Pole site. The air temperature anomalies for June (not shown) have positive values north of Siberia, which continued from May. Eastern Arctic North America was cold. The sea level pressure field for June (Figure 5) shows the “Arctic Dipole” pattern with high pressure north of Alaska and low pressure north of Asia. This pattern is supportive of sea ice loss in the Pacific sector of the Arctic as suggested by the sea ice extent analysis in Figure 2, and has been an important sea ice loss climate pattern since 2005, especially in summer 2007. The 8–14 day 500 mb geopotental heights and anomalies forecast valid for 13–19 July (Figure 6), however, show a rather flat field over the central Arctic with higher pressures north of Greenland and lower pressures near the Aleutian Islands. Another product to keep an eye on is the Climate Prediction Center CFS Forecast of Seasonal Climate Anomalies. Early June appeared favorable for September sea ice loss given the June sea ice extent and the dipole wind pattern. But the sea ice loss may have slowed down in late June, and the early July wind forecast is for no strong wind patterns that would drive further sea ice melt and export. Summer melt conditions in July are expected to follow climatology. Overall, the Outlook yields mixed signals, with the potential for substantial sea ice loss due to what appears to be a record-low in multiyear sea ice extent compared to the extent of first year sea ice, tempered by cooler conditions less favorable to a massive ice loss than in the past two years. This is reflected in how sea ice melt played out so far at the local level, such as in northern Alaska. There, an uncommon balance between factors favoring early ice break-up and cool, cloudy weather have resulted in a lingering ice cover in advanced state of decay.
Figure 5. Sea level pressure analysis for June 2009.
Figure 6. 8–14 day forecast of 500 mb geopotential heights. Key Statements from Individual Outlooks(Name; estimate in million square kilometers; and method) **Ordered from lowest to highest** Lindsay; 4.0 million square kilometers; Model
Rigor et al.; 4.2 million square kilometers; Statistical—age estimates Kauker; Ensemble II= 4.4 million square kilometers, Ensemble I= 4.9 million square kilometers; Model
Zhang; 4.5 million square kilometers; Model
Arbetter et al.; 4.5 million square kilometers; Heuristic
Pokrovsky; 4.5 million square kilometers; Heuristic-statistical
Lukovich and Barber; 4.6 million square kilometers; Heuristic
Stroeve et al.; 4.6 million square kilometers; Statistical
Pemberton et al.; 4.6 million square kilometers; Model Stern; 4.7 million square kilometers; Least squares fit to data
Kay et al.; 4.7 million square kilometers; Heuristic and composite—multiple methods Kaleschke and Halfmann; 4.9 million square kilometers; Statistical
Nguyen et al.; 5.0 million square kilometers; Model
Hori et al.; 5.0 million square kilometers; Heuristic—remote sensing Morison and Untersteiner; 5.2 million square kilometers; Heuristic
Our estimate is based on the same improvement from 2008 to 2009 as occurred going from 2007 to 2008 plus 200,000 square kilometers based on gut feeling. Note: we purposely didn't look at last month's estimates to avoid biasing our estimate. Individual Community Outlook Submissions:
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