Weather & Science

The Arctic’s Peak Ice Cover Has Shrunk by an Area Larger Than Egypt

Long-term ice loss in the Arctic due to climate change will have cascading effects, including disruption of weather patterns. 

A boat makes its way past the sea ice in the Borebukta Bay. 

Photographer: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images
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Sea ice covered 5.64 million square miles of the Arctic Ocean at the ice’s peak extent this year in early March. That’s almost 400,000 square miles less than the median coverage level at other March peaks between 1981 and 2010, according to the National Snow & Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado Boulder. The reduction is equivalent to an area larger than Egypt.

This year’s maximum extent of Arctic ice was the fifth lowest since satellite records began in 1979. And since that record-keeping started, the average ice extent for the entire month of March has shrunk by an average of 15,000 square miles a year, representing a loss of 880,000 square miles — an area bigger than Greenland.