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Article misinterprets satellite data to claim sea ice at 30-year high

Article misinterprets satellite data to claim sea ice at 30-year high - Featured image

Author(s): Roland LLOYD PARRY, AFP USA

An article shared on social media claims that satellite data shows Arctic sea ice is at a 30-year high, implying that this is evidence against human-caused climate change. But the international organization whose data the article cites says its conclusions were misinterpreted and that the long-term trend of shrinking ice is well-documented.

“Arctic ice levels reach 30-year HIGH Despite ever-rising carbon dioxide (CO2) levels, arctic ice is actually expanding, not melting,” claims a June 1, 2022 Facebook postthat links to a May 25 articlefrom the website WND (formerly WorldNetDaily).

“Inconvenient truth for globalists: Arctic ice at 30-year high,” is the headline of the article. “Data contradict connection with rising levels of CO2,” it claims.

Screenshot of a Facebook post taken on June 3, 2022

The article was reproduced on othersites and viewed thousands of times on Twitterand Reddit, according to the social media monitoring tool CrowdTangle.

The article cited the data in the context of the annual meeting in late May 2022 of the World Economic Forum (WEF). It accused the WEF of using “the ‘climate crisis’ and the COVID-19 pandemic as pretexts for measures to redistribute the wealth of nations.” AFP has fact-checkednumerous false claims about the WEF.

“The extent of Arctic ice during the warmer months long has been a metric for climate-change alarmists,” the article says. “As WEF convenes its annual conference in Davos, Switzerland, the Arctic sea ice expanse so far this month is at a 30-year high, according to data from intergovernmental European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites” (EUMETSAT).

It attributed the finding to a postby author Tony Heller, who published graphs of datafrom EUMETSAT’s ocean and sea ice observation satellite systems (OSI SAF). One of those graphs showed that the “ice extent loss” for May 2022 was at its lowest level since May 1989. Another showed the sea ice extent for May had risen compared to recent years to equal the level of 33 years ago.

Heller’s publications denying climate science are documentedby the investigative group DeSmog.

EUMETSAT’s satellite data show sea ice has declined on average since 1980 compared to a reference period

Senior scientist Thomas Lavergneof the Norwegian Meteorological Institute in Oslo, an expert working with EUMETSAT, said that the WND article “by cherry-picking those two years… gives a wrong interpretation of the OSI SAF sea-ice data.”

In comments emailed to AFP, Lavergne said: “In the Arctic, the sea-ice cover (area and extent) is declining in all months” on average.

“The decline is more pronounced in summer (September) than in winter (March) as shown by several satellite products that cover the last 40 years,” he added.

“This reduction in sea ice extent and area does however not happen at a constant speed, there are year-to-year variations: some years will have more sea ice than expected from the trend, some years will have less.” May 1989, for example, saw less Arctic ice than average, and May 2022 had more than average for those periods.

To measure the impact of global warming on sea ice, scientists calculate the percentage change in its extent and volume compared to the average for a reference period of 30 years — in this case, 1981 to 2010.

“The trend in May sea-ice extent is clear,” said Lavergne, citing the graph above which he said shows an average decline of 2.5 percent per decade since 1980. The two dates used by the article are circled as isolated points in a downward trend.

So called pancake ice, a form of sea ice, in Borebukta Bay in Norway’s Svalbard Archipelago (AFP / Jonathan NACKSTRAND)

Sea iceis frozen ocean water, distinct from icebergs, ice sheets, ice shelves and glaciers. Its decline is one of the impacts documented by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Its reporton climate change and oceans was compiled by about 100 scientists from 40 countries.

The IPCC is a frequent target of skeptics who allege it is politicized and cast doubt on its scientific credibility. Some say that, like the WEF, it is part of a globalist order seeking to curtail individual liberties. AFP has fact checked claims about the IPCC’s climate reports here.

The IPCCis widely cited in the scientific community as an authoritative source on climate change and how emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gas from burning fossil fuels are warming the planet.

“It is unequivocal that human influence has warmed the atmosphere, ocean and land,” the IPCC said in its overarching 2021 climate science report. “In 2011- 2020, annual average Arctic sea ice area reached its lowest level since at least 1850.”

A separate studyof peer-reviewed science literature indicated a 99-percent consensus that such human-caused climate change is real.

EUMETSAT added that other parts of the article made misleading claims.

The article cited Heller as saying that the Arctic Ocean gained a record amount of sea ice in September 2021. It added that in summer 2021 “the expanse of Antarctic sea was well above average” — an apparent reference to sea ice.

“The claim about September 2021 also seems inaccurate,” Lavergne said. According to EUMETSAT’s data, Arctic sea ice extent for September 2021 was the 12th lowest since records started in 1979, as shown in the graphbelow left.

EUMETSAT satellite data show Arctic sea ice extent variation from 1979 to 2022
Antarctic sea ice extent from 1979 to 2022

As for the Southern Ocean, “Antarctic sea ice does not see the same long-term reduction in sea-ice cover as the Arctic,” Lavergne said. “There has indeed been a period of ~12 months with an extent larger than average… but the last eight months now have less sea ice than average,” he added, citing the chartabove right.

AFP has previously debunked other false claims about sea ice and the satellite data that are used to monitor it here.

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Originally published here.