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Navigating the Polar Frontier: Exploring the Effects of Sea-Ice Decline on Shipping and Sea Routes in the Arctic

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2025-05

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The Arctic is becoming increasingly vulnerable to climate warming. Arctic amplification has triggered unprecedented environmental shift, affecting a critical component of the ecosystem: sea ice. In recent decades, sea-ice loss has extended seasonal cycle decline by 40%, and the Arctic has experienced two record-breaking minimum extents since 2006. Key shipping routes across the Arctic operate according to this sea ice. This article uses satellite records and shipping reports to examine changes in sea-ice extent and shipping activity from 1979 to 2019. Analysis reveals that Arctic minimum sea-ice extent has reduced by 38.0%, with accelerated trends post-2000. Migration of sea ice away from coastlines has enabled establishment of Arctic sea routes; a Kendall Rank Correlation test reveals statistical significance. Extrapolation of sea-ice trends reveals that continued decline could provoke an ice-free Arctic (1 million km2 ice) by 2060. Arctic sea routes will expand northwards in response; however, they remain vulnerable to geopolitical challenges. This article thus establishes an evident correlation between Arctic sea-ice retreat and rapid shipping growth. It is also concluded that Arctic sea routes will become critical in addressing rising demands of global trade, yet uncertainty remains about their capacity and reliability given required Arctic ecosystem change.

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Thompson, Lily. "Navigating the Polar Frontier: Exploring the Effects of Sea-Ice Decline on Shipping and Sea Routes in the Arctic." Cambridge Journal of Climate Research, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 53-88. https://doi.org/10.60866/CAM.235

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