An Estimate of the Surface Pollution of the Arctic Sea Ice
A. Laubereau, H. Iglev

TL;DR
This study estimates that surface pollution has significantly increased in the Arctic Sea Ice over fifty years, contributing to its melting by enhancing solar radiation absorption, which impacts global climate change.
Contribution
It provides semi-quantitative analysis linking rising surface pollution to Arctic ice melt, highlighting pollution's role in accelerating ice retreat.
Findings
Surface pollution increased by 17% over fifty years.
Additional 3% solar radiation absorption accounts for ice melting.
Approximately 60% of ice loss is due to energy transport, with pollution contributing to the rest.
Abstract
The Arctic sea ice represents an important energy reservoir for the climate of the northern hemisphere. The shrinking of the polar ice in the past decades decreases the stored energy and raises serious concerns about future climate changes.[1-4] Model calculations of the present authors [5,6] suggest that half of the global warming during the past fifty years is directly related to the retreat of the sea ice, while the cause is not well understood, e.g. the role of surface pollution [7-10]. We have analysed the reported annual melting and freezing data of the northern sea ice in the years 1979 to 2018 [11] to gain some insight. Two features can be deduced from our simple model: (i) recent results [12,13] are confirmed that approximately 60 % of the loss of sea ice stems from energy transport to the arctic region. (ii) We find evidence that the remaining part of the ice retreat…
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Taxonomy
TopicsArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics · Atmospheric chemistry and aerosols · Climate change and permafrost
