I think there is a degree of alarmism in the above - looking at the charts, the area which is well down on where it should be is Baffin/Newfoundland - but that is clearly down to the unusual synoptics experienced this winter with warm winds consistently in a region which should be frigid.
Originally Posted by: Gandalf The White
Why do you think that is "alarmist"? Nobody is saying it is alarming, merely that based on current trends there is that possibility.
In any event, are you saying that the recent synoptics have been unique? I find it difficult to accept that the synoptics are responsible for the ice extent fairly consistently hitting new lows for much of the last three months?
The reality is that the ice extent has been fairly consistently 15% down on the 1979-2000 mean for the time of year since November and as much as 30% down at the minimum achieved at the end of the melt season.
If you look at the graphs you will find that the ice extent values this century are clustered well below the previous mean values and that 2010 has been tracking since the autumn at the bottom of the cluster.
This isn't supposed to be alarmism, merely an extrapolation of what we have been seeing in recent years. I know there are some, e.g. Stephen, who maintain that the ocean heat from the sustained string of predominant La Ninas is still having an effect and that it is unrelated to AGW. That's fine - time will tell which is the main driver for the downward trend.
Originally Posted by: Maunder Minimum