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The sea ice coverage is diminishing ever more for each passing summer since 1979. The illustration shows the 2012 sea ice minimum. The area covered by sea ice was only half the size of the historical line (the yellow line) that is the average sea ice in the period 1979 – 2000.
At the same time, it has become significantly thinner. This means that 75 per cent of the total volume of the summer sea ice has already disappeared.

A little update on the sea ice extent. First and foremost they admit that sea ice extent data goes back only to 1979 which is when recording of sea ice extent began. We do not know what sea ice extent was like annually before 1979 for the last decades or hundreds of years earlier. Having 35 years worth of data isn't enough in the world of science to see actual long term trend of sea ice extent. Sunspot activity data has a much better record keeping going back to 1755 or some 250 years of data to have on hand. And we are in one of the lowest number of recorded sunspot activity in a long, long time which might tell us something of what may occur in the near future.
The predictions suggested the monthly average sunspot total should range between 90 and 140, but in fact the present monthly average is only 67, Dr Elliott said. A typical average at maximum during much of the early 20th century was about 200.

“It is the smallest solar maximum we have seen in 100 years,” said Dr David Hathaway of Nasa. We are currently in solar cycle number 24 which is about half as active as cycle 23, but cycle 25 is likely to be smaller again due to changes in the magnetic flux on the sun’s surface,” he said.

Dr Giuliana de Toma of the High Altitude Observatory acknowledged the clear signs that solar activity was in decline but this did not mean the earth was heading for another “Maunder Minimum”. This was a time between 1645 and 1725 when solar activity was extremely low or nonexistent, a situation which caused a mini ice age.

The fall-off in sunspot activity still has the potential to affect our weather for the worse, Dr Elliott said. Research by Prof Mike Lockwood at the University of Reading showed how low solar activity could alter the position of the jet stream over the north Atlantic, causing severe cold during winter months. This was likely the cause of the very cold and snowy winters during 2009 and 2010, Dr Elliott said.

“It all points to perhaps another little ice age,” he said. “It seems likely we are going to enter a period of very low solar activity and could mean we are in for very cold winters.”

And while the researchers in the US said the data showed a decline in activity, they had no way to predict what that might mean for the future.
Sun

Sea ice right now is close to the 2000's average minimum sea ice extent. We're only a few weeks away from approaching the summer minimum sea ice extent but it doesn't look like it'll melt any further because the daily mean temperatures for the Arctic area north of the 80th northern parallel dipped below 32 degrees F about 10 or 11 days earlier than normal.
COI | Centre for Ocean and Ice | Danmarks Meteorologiske Institut

Let's look at some pictures first.

Here's the current 2013 minimum sea ice (as of August 29 - most recent data) extent compared side by side to the September 16 2012 lowest sea ice extent:

Daily Arctic Sea Ice Maps

You can see easily that this year's extent currently is much bigger than last year's sea ice extent. What is going on? We can only wait and speculate at this point and are at the mercy of the Sun, the Earth and our climate.
 
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