Originally posted by EternalOptimist
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The point being that the ice reaches a minimum each year, in September, which provides a useful comparison point. It is unlikely that this year will be another record breaker, though it will be on the trend line. In denierland, any year in which the ice does not reach a new low is of course heralded as a 'recovery'.
The arctic ice cap has been a feature of our planet for millenia and is disappearing in what in context is the blink of an eye, much of that loss occurring during what has been misnamed 'the pause'.
Regardless of whether the arctic becomes ice free in 2015, 2025 or 2045, it is now pretty much locked in and we have literally no idea what the effect of such a state will have on the climate of the northern hemisphere. Not alarmism, just facts.
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