The average Canadian household destroys hockey rink-sized stretch of sea ice every 8 years - Action News
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Science

The average Canadian household destroys hockey rink-sized stretch of sea ice every 8 years

Researchers have developed a formula to calculate exactly how much Arctic sea ice you, as an individual, destroy every day and it's surprisingly simple.

Study finds 3 square metres of Arctic sea ice melts for every tonne of C02 produced

Children play amid icebergs on the beach in Nuuk, Greenland, on June 5. A new study suggests three square metres of Arctic sea ice disappears for every tonne of CO2 produced by humans. (Alister Doyle/Reuters)

Scientists have come up with a shockingly simpleformula that lets individuals calculate exactly how much they are contributing to climate change.

For every tonne of carbon dioxide (CO2) a person produces, three square metres of Arctic sea ice melts, according to researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology in Hamburg, Germany, the National Snow and Ice Data Centre in Boulder, Colo., and the University College London in the U.K.

The findings, based on observational data from the1960s to the present,werepublishedin the journal Science.

"So far, climate change has often felt like a rather abstract notion. Our results allow us to overcome this perception,"co-author Julienne Stroeve, an expert in sea ice satellite measurements at the National Snow and Ice Data Center, said in a releasefrom the Max Planck Institute.

Taking a 4,000-kilometre road trip?That's three square metres of Arctic sea ice gone, by the team's calculations.Around-trip flight from London toSan Francisco is five square metres.

Canadians emitted 20.6 tonnes of CO2 per person in 2014, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada.

If the average Canadian household has about three people, according to the formula, it it would take them about 8.5 years to destroy1,579 square metres of Arctic sea ice roughlythe size of an NHL rink, not taking into account the thickness of the ice.

How much time do we have?

In a stable ice pack, the warming effect of infrared radiation generated by the sun is balanced by cold temperatures in the atmosphere. But increasing levels of carbon dioxide prevent those infrared rays from escaping into space.

As a result, the ice retreats northward where there's less solar radiation.

"The ice is migrating to re-establish equilibrium," said Stroeve.

Arctic ea ice is melting at a rapid pace, which is bad news for wildlife and for people. (Getty Images/Vetta)

Establishing that hard link between CO2 and sea ice has important consequences.

Rutgers University marine scientist Jennifer Francis, who wasn't part of the study, told The Associated Pressthe link is so clear and direct that "we know beyond a shadow of a doubt thatArctic sea ice is disappearing because of increased carbon dioxide."

For years, climate modellers have attempted to pinpoint when summer sea ice is likely to disappear. Some scientists have estimated the end of this century; others have said it should already be gone.

The study's authorssay the most likely date is sometime around mid-century unless CO2 emissions slow significantly.

That date is important for any number of reasons.

A seasonally open Arctic would ease northern shipping and resource development. It would be catastrophic for plants and animals that live on sea ice, as well as for the people who depend on them.

It would also have unknown consequences for climate around the world. Sea ice is often referred to as the Earth's air-conditioning unit and it has been linked to the behaviour of the jet stream, a high-altitude river of air that influences rainfall, drought and extreme instances of both.

Sea ice affects more than just polar bears, said Stroeve.

"We are all ice-dependent species."

'Rather crude'

But not everyone's buying the study's simple formula.

"This sounds like a rather crude equation," Peter Wadhams, a professor of ocean physics at Cambridge University, told Reuters.

He said ice could disappear from the Arctic Ocean as early as 2017 or 2018 because of other factors triggered by human-made climate change, such as shifts in winds and rising sea temperatures.

Eureka Sound on Ellesmere Island in the Canadian Arctic is seen in a NASA Operation IceBridge survey picture taken March 25, 2014. (Michael Studinger/NASA via Reuters)

In September 2016, sea ice shrank to an annual minimum extent of 4.14 million square kilometres,matching 2007 as the second smallest in the satellite record behind 2012.

Thursday's study said goals set under the 2015 Paris Agreement which came into effect today were insufficient to avert the loss of ice.

Governments meet in Marrakesh, Morocco, from Nov. 7-18 to work out how to implement the agreement.

With files from Reuters and The Associated Press