It constantly melts.

Antarctic sea ice last month reached its smallest area on record for a month of July in 44 years of satellite records, alerted the European climate change service Copernicus, confirming an alarming year.

Since 1979, scientists have had very precise measurements of the extent of the ice floes at the North and South Poles thanks to satellites.

Sea ice is the ice that floats on the ocean;

its melting therefore does not raise sea levels, but it indirectly contributes to global warming, as the open ocean absorbs more heat.



Long-term rapid melting

The normal cycle of sea ice, in the Arctic as in Antarctica, is that it melts in summer and re-forms in winter.

In the long term, the melting is rapid in Greenland and the Arctic, but conversely, in the Antarctic, the trend was modestly upward, despite significant annual and regional variations, without us understanding the exact phenomenon.

The Antarctic sea ice had only reformed in July, which is winter in the southern hemisphere, over an average of 15.3 million square kilometers, i.e. 1.1 million km2 less (-7%) than the average for that month between 1991 and 2020, Copernicus (C3S) scientists found.

At the end of the austral summer, in February, the sea ice had shrunk to its historic low, panicking scientists.

It was 30% smaller than the three-decade average between 1981 and 2010. Since February, it had remained below seasonal averages, according to C3S.

And in June already, it had reached its historic low for the month.

2022, a year of sad records

In the Arctic, sea ice extent was 4% below average in July, according to Copernicus, the 12th lowest extent on record for July.

Illustrating the imperfect understanding of the warming phenomenon in Antarctica, Copernicus recalls that the sea ice there was, conversely, above average a year ago, in July 2021.

2022 is a year of climate records in the world.

July was one of the three hottest on record in the world, according to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), a UN specialized agency based in Geneva.

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