Their conclusions from this work and from other measurements that have been done and from new models are that the summer ice will disappear within 20 to 30 years, and it will be, a lot of it will be gone within 10 years. And it will retreat to a fairly small area north of Greenland within about a decade, and then the rest of the ice pool will disappear during the following decade.
These results are significant because they highlight the urgency, they highlight how and important aspect of the climate system is actually much more vulnerable to climate change than we thought.
Sommerkorn noted that the Arctic sea holds a central position in the earth's climate system, and loss of Arctic ice could impact the climate of the regions way beyond the Arctic itself. Potential consequences include flooding affecting a quarter of the world's population, significant increases in greenhouse gas emissions from massive carbon pools, as well as extreme global weather changes. Global warming has raised the stakes in the scramble for sovereignty in the Arctic because shrinking polar ice could someday open resource development and new shipping lanes. The rapid ice melting has raised speculation that the Northwest Passage linking the Atlantic and Pacific oceans could one day become a regular shipping lane.