Arctic Sea-Ice: Another Hockey Stick?
World Climate Report, October 30, 2007
http://www.worldclimatereport.com/index.php/2007/10/30/arctic-sea-ice-another-hockey-stick/#more-280
This figure, labeled as ÒSea-ice Extent: Northern HemisphereÓ was
presented by Al Gore in the book version of his science (fiction) movie An
Inconvenient Truth. But is this depiction of the Arctic sea ice extent over the
course of the 20th century even close to reality?
Probably not.

Figure 1. Arctic sea-ice extent as depicted by Al Gore in An
Inconvenient Truth. (source: An Inconvenient Truth, p. 143)
It does, however, bear a lot of similarity to another (at-one-time-popular)
depiction of an aspect of climate that was widely used to demonstrate just how
unusual things had become under mankindÕs stewardship—the
paleo-reconstructed multi-century temperature history of the Northern
Hemisphere, aka the Òhockey stickÓ graph (Figure 2). That graph, when it first
was published, had a many-centuries long ÒhandleÓ with a single century uptick
at the end, Òthe blade.Ó The hockey stick graphic made it look like, when left
to its own devices, the natural variation of annual average temperature in the
Northern Hemisphere during much of the past 1,000 years was very small (and
temperatures themselves were trending downwards). Then mankind began pernicious
economic activity, and temperatures took off like a rocket in the other
direction (indicating a rapid warming).

Figure 2. The Òhockey stickÓ reconstruction of the past 1,000
years of annual temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere as it was depicted in
the Third Assessment Report (2001) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (source: IPCC TAR, p. 3)
But the rigidness of the Òhockey stickÓ didnÕt hold up under
scrutiny. Over time, refinements and improvements were made to the paleo
datasets, more researchers got involved, the analysis methods changed, data
handling techniques were updated, etc. with the net result being that the
ÒhandleÓ of the hockey stick, representing natural climate variability, is now
a lot wigglier than it was first depicted (Figure 3). This doesnÕt mean that
humans havenÕt had a significant impact on the earthÕs climate in recent
decades, but it does better place the impact in the context of a naturally
variable climate.
Figure 3. In its latest Fourth
Assessment Report (2007) the IPCC depicts the past 1,000 years of the Northern
Hemisphere annual temperatures like this—many more reconstructions
containing a lot more variance. It no longer looks much like a hockey stick
(source, IPCC AR4, p. 467)
The saga of the Òhockey stickÓ is an example of early research
efforts into complex topics that produce a far too simplified result making the
behavior of well-measured data (in this case, more recent data) look
particularly unusual when compared against that of more sparse data (in this
case, data from longer ago). Such results are often used to overemphasize the
current human contribution to climate variability.
It looks like Gore has honed his own stick. His depiction of the
Northern Hemisphere sea-ice extent (Figure 1) shows basically small annual
variations, but no trend from about 1900 through about 1970, and then a large
decrease in the period since. The decrease certainly looks pretty dramatic and
gives the distinct impression (aided by GoreÕs presentation) that human
activities, which have been fingered in the recent Arctic sea-ice declines, are
producing changes that are quite unusual, at least in the context of the last
100 years.
As new data and analyses come to light, it is looking less and
less likely that the early-to-mid 20th century variations in Arctic sea ice
were as low as indicated by GoreÕs hockey stick.
For instance, as we have described in a recent World Climate
Report article entitled ÒA million square miles of open waterÓ there exist historic
observations, as well as currently active research efforts, that strongly
indicate that there was a large sea-ice extent decline from about the mid-1920s
to the mid-1940s. Writing in 1953, arctic researcher Hans Ahlmann noted that ÒThe
extent of drift ice in Arctic waters has also diminished considerably in the
last decades. According to information received in the U.S.S.R. in 1945, the
area of drift ice in the Russian sector of the Arctic was reduced by no less
than 1,000,000 square kilometers between 1924 and 1944.Ó And in a recent
seminar at the National Snow and Ice Data Center (at the University of
Colorado) researcher Andy Mahoney explained that Ò[Historic] timeseries of air
temperature and the extents of pack ice, multiyear ice and landfast ice extents
reveal three distinct periods of variability over the last 8 decades: a period
of warm winters and decreasing summer and fall sea ice extent (period A),
followed by a cool period of stable or slightly increasing extent (period B)
before a period of year-round warm temperatures and ice loss (period C).Ó Yet
there is no sign of such variation in sea-ice extent in the handle of GoreÕs
hockey stick from 1900 to 1970.
Gore wants to relate recent Arctic sea ice declines to the recent
warm-up there. Seems reasonable. But since the record of Arctic temperatures
not only shows a warm-up in recent decades, but also a similar in relative
magnitude warm-up from the early years of the 20th century to about the
mid-1940s (Figure 4) shouldnÕt Gore have expected sea ice to respond in a
similar fashion then as now and show a significant decline? WerenÕt he
suspicious when his Figure didnÕt show one? And what about the period from the
mid-1940s to the mid-1970s when Arctic average temperatures declined a healthy
amount? ShouldnÕt he have expected an increase in sea ice extent during that
period? Where is that on his hockey stick graphic?

Figure 4. Arctic annual temperature history, 1900-2003 (source:
ACIA, 2004).
It is not sufficient for Gore to hide behind the source of his
Figure, which he lists as ÒHadley CarterÓ (whoever that is, but weÕll bet it
means ÒHadley Center,Ó a British government entity known for the hyping of
climate change). The closest thing we could find is this graphic from the Cryosphere
Today site of the University of Illinois Polar Research Group. The
dataset documentation file that accompanies the
chart is full of caveats about how the dataset was put together including the
warning ÒPlease note that much of the pre-1953 data is either climatology or
interpolated data and the user is cautioned to use this data with care.Ó Well,
the incorporation of climatology (long-term averages) goes a long way towards
explaining the lack of variation in early 20th century data. But nowhere in our
paper copy of An Inconvenient Truth is any of this made clear. Instead, we just
see a graph with little ice variability for 70 years, and then a steep drop off
during the past 30.
And finally, a paper was published in 2004 (before An Inconvenient
Truth was released) that discussed some Arctic ice data that wasnÕt included in
the dataset that underlies GoreÕs image. This ÒnewÓ set of old data sounds like
the same Russian dataset discussed by Ahlmann and more recently Mahoney. When
Johannessen and colleagues used the Òhitherto under-recognizedÓ Russian sea ice
extent observations to create a long-term 20th century record of sea ice, they
produced a Arctic sea-ice extent history that looked quite different from the
Gore hockey stick version and, in fact, exhibited a much higher correspondence
with the Arctic temperature history (as you might imagine). Figure 5 shows
JohannessenÕs Arctic sea-ice reconstruction (red line), together with the one
likely used by Gore (green line), and the Arctic temperature history (black
line).

Figure 5. Arctic sea ice extent reconstructed from the
Òunder-recognizedÓ Russian dataset (red), a version of the sea ice extent
dataset likely used by Gore (green), and the history of Arctic annual
temperatures (black). (source: Johannessen et al., 2004).
The authors note that the Russian sea ice observations do not
encompass the entire Arctic (lacking about 23% of the total area, primarily
that which lies along the coast of North America including the eastern Chukchi
Sea, the Beaufort Sea and the Canadian Arctic straits and bays), and that the
data are inadequate during World War II and the early post-war years. This
probably explains the lack of correspondence between the Arctic sea-ice extent
and falling temperatures during the decade of the 1940s, as well as why the
Russian reconstruction doesnÕt fall off as much in recent years (where a lot of
sea ice loss was experienced off the northern coast of North America). But,
despite these shortcomings, it is interesting to note that the Russian reconstruction
includes a far greater degree of interdecadal variation, including a large
decline from 1900 to the 1940s, a recovery from the 1940s into the late 1960s
(quite possibly underestimated due to insufficient data during the early part
of this period), and a then a subsequent decline to the present. The present
decline has resulted in the absolute lowest sea ice extent area but it has not
progressed at the absolute fastest rate—which occurred early in the 20th
century.
Mahoney explained in his seminar, Ò[T]he Russian Arctic ice pack
did not fully recover during [the mid century], suggesting that the early 20th
Century warmingÉmay have preconditioned the Arctic for greater change in recent
decades.Ó In other words, human activity may be responsible for pushing Arctic
sea ice to its lowest extent in the past 100 years or so, but we had quite a
bit of help from Mother Nature.
Gore often brags about getting classified records of Arctic sea
ice observations taken by the U.S. Navy during the cold war released for
scientific analysis that apparently shows what he wants—a recent decline
in Arctic sea ice. But he turns his back on extant datasets that tell a
different, less alarming story—that there has been a large degree of
variation in Arctic sea-ice extent over the course of the 20th century, much of
which was fuelled by non-human induced climate variations.
GoreÕs hockey stick, like the one the came before his, is simply
wrong in that it underestimates the behavioral complexities of the real world
and paints a false picture as to the relative magnitude of the human
contribution to date.
Chalk this up to another in the growing list of ÒerrorsÓ that lie within An Inconvenient Truth.
References:
Ahlmann, H. W., 1953. ÒGlacier Variations and Climatic
FluctuationsÓ. Series Three, Bowman Lecture Series, The American Geographical
Society, George Grady Press, New York, available from http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=1918470
Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, 2004. Cambridge University
Press. Cambridge U.K. (http://www.acia.uaf.edu/pages/scientific.html)
Gore, A., 2006. An Inconvenient Truth, Rodale, pp. 327.
Johannessen, O.M., et al., 2004. Arctic climate change: observed
and modelled temperature and sea-ice variability. Tellus, 56A, 328-341.