Extent of Antarctic sea ice reached a record low in February

This minimum is the lowest in the 45-year satellite record and has beaten the previous record low.

Published : Mar 09, 2023 10:40 IST

 The ice extent on February 21 was 1.79 million km2. The orange line shows the 1981 to 2010 average for that day. | Photo Credit: NSIDC

Scientists at the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) of NASA at the University of Colorado Boulder reported that Antarctic sea ice likely reached its minimum extent for 2023, at 1.79 million square kilometres on February 21. This minimum is the lowest in the 45-year satellite record and has beaten the previous record low, which occurred in 2022, by 0.136,000 million km2.

“Antarctica’s response to climate change has been different from the Arctic’s,” said Ted Scambos, a senior researcher who is involved with the Antarctic sea ice analysis. “The downward trend in sea ice may be a signal that global warming is finally affecting the floating ice around Antarctica, but it will take several more years to be confident of it. Lower sea ice extent means that ocean waves will pound the coast of the giant ice sheet, further reducing ice shelves around Antarctica.” Julienne Stroeve, the NSIDC’s senior research scientist, added: “The sea ice helps to buffer large floating ice shelves and major outlet glaciers such as Pine Island and Thwaites, and if these glaciers begin a more rapid runaway loss of land ice, it could trigger a dramatic increase in sea level rise rates before the end of this century.”

The NSIDC stated that the Antarctic sea ice extent number is preliminary; continued melt conditions could lower the ice extent further. 

You have exhausted your free article limit.
Get a free trial and read Frontline FREE for 15 days
Signup and read this article for FREE

More stories from this issue

Get unlimited access to premium articles, issues, and all-time archives