Floating icebergs will not be seen in the Arctic Sea
According to a new scientific study, for the first time in the summer of 2030, all the ice floating in the Arctic Sea will melt.
This shocking information is because earlier researchers had told that by 2040 the temperature of the earth will be so high that there will not be a single iceberg floating in the Arctic Sea.
That is, the changes in the Arctic Sea due to climate change will not only be visible a decade earlier, but even in 2030, even if countries around the world take more seriously the efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions •
Changes in the Arctic Sea will not be stopped Can go While earlier studies had suggested that strict implementation of measures to reduce global warming could save the floating ice in the Arctic Sea.
Every year the ice in the Arctic Sea freezes and melts. That is, till March the sea ice freezes and starts melting in September.
In fact, ever since the measurement through satellites started in 1979, since then the estimation of the amount of Arctic ice melting started in summer.
Due to this, along with the assessment of the decreasing amount of iceberg in the sea in the summer, the study also started that how long the entire ice of the Arctic can melt. 'We will very soon lose the icebergs floating in the Arctic Sea. In fact, we are too late to stop climate change', says Dirk Notz, a climatologist at the University of Hamburg in Germany and one of the five authors of the new research.
Rising temperatures will warm the surface of the Arctic Ocean, and Greenland's ice caps will melt faster, raising sea levels globally. Differences in temperature at the North Pole and the equator will also affect storm areas and wind speeds. This means that the warming of the Arctic Ocean will also affect the weather ie it will increase the incidence of extreme rainfall and heat wave in North America, Europe and Asia.
The region to the north and beyond has already warmed four times the global average over the past four decades, in what scientists call the Arctic expansion. 'The findings of our study suggest that Arctic expansion is not only accelerating, but also robust,' says Seong-ki-Man, a climatologist at Pohang University in South Korea and one of the authors of the current research study.
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