southern hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

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Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

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Page 1: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate

change

Page 2: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

A greater extent of sea ice isn’t necessarily inconsistent with the

current climate change theory

Page 3: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Hansard House of Representatives, 18th Feb 2008

Dr JENSEN:“I have no doubt that all the anthropogenic globalwarming believers have heard about the melting Arcticsea ice, although interestingly we now hear Denmark’sMeteorological Institute state that the ice between Canada and south-west Greenland right now has reachedits greatest extent in 15 years.…

It also noted that the Arctic sea ice extent has nowcompletely recovered. But, interestingly, how manyhave heard that the extent of Antarctic sea ice is thegreatest measured since measurements began in 1979?”

Page 4: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Some definitions:

1.Sea ice concentration

2.Sea ice extent

3.Sea ice area

4.Volume

Page 5: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change
Page 6: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Pre 1973:•Proxy data for regional sea ice extent•Based on relationship between methanesulphonic acid (MSA) and sea ice

Page 7: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

1973-1978:•Digitised from hand drawn charts produced in part from satellite observations

•Gridded onto 1o area grid

Page 8: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

October 1978 onwards:•Satellite data (Nimbus-7 SMMR and DMSP SSM/I Passive Microwave)

•25km resolution

Page 9: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

The offending month…

September 2007 Southern Hemisphere

sea ice

Data from Nimbus-7 SMMR and DMSP SSM/I Passive Microwave

Page 10: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Extent: 19.2 million square kilometres

Area: 15.2 million square kilometres

Page 11: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Extent: 19.2 million square kilometres

Area: 15.2 million square kilometres

Extent anomaly: • 3% above the long term mean• 2nd highest on record (behind

2006)Area anomaly:• 6% above the long term mean• highest on record

Page 12: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change
Page 13: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change
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Page 15: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change
Page 16: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Reynolds’ SST anomalies (NOAA OI SST Analysis)

Page 17: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

September 2006the greatest

sea ice extentsince satellite records

began (1979)(just to show it’snot all clear cut)

Page 18: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

There are two classic views on Antarctic sea ice extent changes with a warming climate:

1. Decrease

2. Increase

Trends in Southern Hemisphere sea ice

Page 19: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Something that stuck in my mind

Surface temperature

MSLP

Zonal wind speed

Page 20: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Trends in zonal sea ice extent since 1979…

Page 22: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Trends in sea ice concentration since 1979…

Page 23: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Satellite data (Nimbus-7 SMMR and DMSP SSM/I

Passive Microwave)

NSIDC

October 1978 through to present day

All trends at 95% confidence

Page 24: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

TRENDSIN JULY

Page 25: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

TRENDSIN AUGUST

Page 26: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

TRENDS INSEPTEMBER

Page 27: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Longer term zonal trends

Page 28: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

HadISST dataset:

- Monthly 1° grids of ice coverage for 1870 to present

- A blend of In situ sea surface observations and SSMI

- Anomalies based on 1973 through 2006

Dec 1987:- Based on only 2 days of satellite

data (1st and 2nd Dec)- 6 previous months and 6

following months were all close to or well below the long term mean

Page 29: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

NSIDS sea ice index:

- Monthly 25km grids of ice coverage for Oct 1978 to present

- SMMR and SSM/I instruments

- Anomalies based on 1979 through 2006

Page 30: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Dec 2007 (1.5)

Jan 2008 (1.7)

Feb 2008 (0.7)

Page 31: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Even longer term zonal trends

using

Ice core proxies

Page 32: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Ice Core Proxy

Page 33: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Law Dome MSA concentrations have a maximum positive correlation to sea ice extent between 80-140E for Aug, Sep & Oct

Ice Core Proxy

Page 34: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Causes of change in Southern Hemisphere sea ice

Page 35: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Ozone•Appears to be a link between total column ozone and the SAM

•Subsequent link between the SAM and sea ice in summer-autumn

Thompson, D.W.J., and S. Solomon, 2002: Interpretation of recent Southern Hemisphere climate change. Science, 296, 895-899.

Page 36: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

December - May

Page 37: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Ozone

“The mechanism linking tropospheric circulation changes to stratospheric polar ozone changes is not well understood.”…“The ozone recovery through the C21 leads to a warming of the polar stratosphere during spring, stronger easterly zonal winds in the stratosphere during late spring and early summer, and an increase of tropospheric westerlies during summer.”

(NOAA) Perlwitz J., S. Pawson, R. Fogt, J. E. Nielsen, and W. Neff, (2008): The impact of stratospheric ozone hole recovery on Antarctic Climate. Geophys. Res. Lett., submitted.

Page 38: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

The IPCC

“Antarctic sea ice extent continues to show inter-annual variability and localized changes but no statistically significant average trends, consistent with the lack of warming reflected in atmospheric temperatures averaged across the region.”

IPCC, Climate Change 2007: The Physical Science Basis

Page 39: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Other views – CC Sceptic

“Conclusion: The data clearly show that Antarctica as a whole is seeing increases in sea ice extent in recent decades, in spite of what climate models suggest should be occurring: steady warming. There are regional differences, with Weddell Sea ice extent decreasing and Ross Sea ice increasing, but overall the pattern is clear: there is more ice, not less, surrounding Antarctica.”

Antarctic Temperature and Sea Ice Trends over the Last Century March 2006 – George Taylor (CECAP, International Climate and Environmental Change Assessment Project)

Page 40: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

Jan 2008

Page 41: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

http://arctic.atmos.uiuc.edu/cryosphere/IMAGES/current.365.south.jpg

Page 42: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

“In Antarctica, no discernable trends have been documented for the continent as a whole, although there have been noticeable decreases in sea ice extent around the Antarctic Peninsula.

It is possible, however, that Antarctic sea ice may be changing more in thickness than in extent. To date, there are few broad-scale data about sea ice thickness and this is a key area of research for the ACE CRC and others. In addition, a summary of climate models from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change indicates that sea ice extent in Antarctica will decrease in the future, perhaps by as much as 50% by the end of the 21st century.”

ACE CRC Antarctic Sea ice Issue Brief:

Page 43: Southern Hemisphere sea ice versus climate change

QTB

Since around 1980 the lack of overall warming in the Antarctic has coincided with stable sea ice on a Southern Ocean-wide scale, although there have been significant regional variations. However, Southern Hemisphere sea ice had a short lived spike in coverage during the spring of 2007: during this period sea ice reached a new record but has since returned to average levels.