Antarctic sea ice shrinks to record low

sea ice around Antarctica

The extent of sea ice around Antarctica hit a new low in January, bucking an overall growing trend since recordkeeping began in 1979.

Baron Reznik/Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Sea ice around Antarctica shrunk to its lowest monthly extent on record in January, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports.

Antarctic sea ice extent averaged just 4.04 million square kilometers, 1.19 million square kilometers below the 1981 through 2010 average. That’s 280,000 square kilometers smaller than the previous record low, set in 2006.

The new record comes just two years after the largest January Antarctic sea ice extent on record. Southern Hemisphere sea ice has been growing by about 3 percent per decade since recordkeeping began in 1979, albeit with considerable year-to-year variability.

The cause of the record-low ice, and whether future years will similarly buck the growing trend, is unclear, James Pope, a climate scientist with the British Antarctic Survey, said in a statement. More context is needed, he explained.

On the other side of the globe, Arctic sea ice had its smallest January extent on record, edging out the previous record set last year.

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