Study on the annual changing trend of Arctic Sea ice melting for mechant shipping
Paper in proceeding, 2023

The continuous melting of Arctic Sea ice has attracted increasing interest in the potential of navigation in the Arctic route. In summer, the salinity of the upper water body of the Arctic Ocean changes dramatically, causing more so-lar radiation to enter the sea water, thus increasing the melting rate of sea ice. Most existing studies used the sea ice concentration (SIC) to evaluate the sea ice condition along the route. Based on the historical sea ice data (including sea ice area) in Arctic waters, this study investigated the annual sea ice changing trend in Arctic waters, especially in summer, and identified the key Straits that have influence on the number of vessels traversing the NSR. The overall Arctic Sea ice area has shown a decreasing trend with large interannual variability in the past two decades. The navigable capacity of Sannikov Straitis is in general consistent with the overall ice change of Arctic waters. Nevertheless, the sea ice in Vilkitsky Strait fluctuates to a large degree with significant uncertainties

Author

Zhikang Wang

Wuhan University of Technology

Jinfen Zhang

Wuhan University of Technology

Da wu

Wuhan University of Technology

Wuliu Tian

Wuhan University of Technology

Xiao Lang

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Wengang Mao

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Marine Technology

Advances in the Analysis and Design of Marine Structures - Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Marine Structures, MARSTRUCT 2023

605-612
978-1-032-50636-4 (ISBN)

9th International Conference on Marine Structures, MARSTRUCT 2023
Gothenburg, Sweden,

Explore innovative solutions for arctic shipping

The Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education (STINT) (Dnr:CH2016-6673), 2017-05-01 -- 2020-06-30.

Areas of Advance

Transport

Roots

Basic sciences

Subject Categories

Reliability and Maintenance

DOI

10.1201/9781003399759-67

More information

Latest update

3/12/2024