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Dramatic slowdown in melting of Arctic sea ice surprises scientists

3 days ago
  • #Climate Change
  • #Sea Ice
  • #Arctic
  • Arctic sea ice melting has slowed significantly since 2005, despite rising carbon emissions.
  • Natural ocean current variations have temporarily balanced global warming effects on ice melting.
  • Scientists warn the slowdown is temporary, with accelerated melting likely in the next 5-10 years.
  • September Arctic sea ice area has halved since 1979, indicating long-term decline.
  • Multi-decadal ocean current fluctuations are likely causing the current slowdown in ice melting.
  • An ice-free Arctic is still expected later this century, with severe environmental impacts.
  • The study used data from 1979 to present, showing slowdown across all months.
  • Climate models suggest such slowdowns are rare but not unprecedented, occurring a few times per century.
  • Sea ice volume continues to decrease even if area remains stable, thinning by 0.6cm/year since 2010.
  • Global temperature rise has shown similar pauses before, but the long-term trend remains upward.
  • Scientists emphasize climate change is real, human-driven, and requires urgent action despite temporary slowdowns.