When Will Arctic Sea Ice Disappear? Projections of Area, Extent, Thickness, and Volume
Rapidly diminishing Arctic summer sea ice is a strong signal of the pace of global climate change. We provide point, interval, and density forecasts for four measures of Arctic sea ice: area, extent, thickness, and volume. Importantly, we enforce the joint constraint that these measures must simultaneously arrive at an ice-free Arctic. We apply this constrained joint forecast procedure to models relating sea ice to atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and models relating sea ice directly to time. The resulting "carbon-trend" and "time-trend" projections are mutually consistent and predict a nearly ice-free summer Arctic Ocean by the mid-2030s with an 80% probability. Moreover, the carbon-trend projections show that global adoption of a lower carbon path would likely delay the arrival of a seasonally ice-free Arctic by only a few years.
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Copy CitationFrancis X. Diebold, Glenn D. Rudebusch, Maximilian Göbel, Philippe Goulet Coulombe, and Boyuan Zhang, "When Will Arctic Sea Ice Disappear? Projections of Area, Extent, Thickness, and Volume," NBER Working Paper 30732 (2022), https://doi.org/10.3386/w30732.
Published Versions
Francis X. Diebold & Glenn D. Rudebusch & Maximilian Göbel & Philippe Goulet Coulombe & Boyuan Zhang, 2023. "When will Arctic sea ice disappear? Projections of area, extent, thickness, and volume," Journal of Econometrics, vol 236(2). citation courtesy of ![]()