In 2025, melting sea ice allowed a Canadian icebreaker to enter the world’s last ice area

CCGS Amundsen in the Canadian High Arctic. For the first time in history, a Canadian research icebreaker entered the waters around the Queen Elizabeth Islands and western Tuvaijuittuq. (Alexandre Normandeau)

By Samuel Wat

The waters around the Queen Elizabeth Islands and western Tuvaijuittuq in Canada’s High Arctic have long remained a mystery to scientists.

Often referred to as one of the last places in the world with year-round sea ice, these waters have historically been difficult to access because of the thickness of the ice.

But melting sea ice has opened a path for a Canadian research icebreaker to sail through some of these passageways for the first time ever. 

“We have lost ice, we have increased the area of open water, and the area is now more navigable,” said David Babb, a research associate at the University of Manitoba’s Centre for Earth Observation Science. 

On Sept. 4, scientists with Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) and the University of Manitoba embarked on a four-week cruise aboard the CCGS Amundsen to study Arctic sea ice. In written responses to CBC News, DFO said the voyage represents the first comprehensive oceanographic research mission to reach this area of the Canadian Archipelago. 

Multiple studies suggest these Arctic is warming four times faster than anywhere else on Earth, and there are different estimates for how soon sea ice in the Arctic could disappear. Some suggest it could happen within this decade. 

The fact that an icebreaker is able to enter one of the world’s last refuges of sea ice is yet another startling sign of the effects of climate change. But it also presents an opportunity for scientists like Babb to learn more about this “understudied” part of the Arctic.

“This allows us to sort of understand what is happening in this area right now and guide projections on what is going to happen into the future,” Babb said.

David Babb, one of the researchers on board the CCGS Amundsen this year, found some ice up to seven metres thick, but these were rare finds. (Alexandre Normandeau)

‘Really deteriorated and heavily melted sea ice’

On board the ship, Babb was surprised, at first, by the lack of thick ice, fish and organic matter like tiny phytoplankton in the Arctic waters, particularly around Nansen Sound and Greely Fjord. 

The thickest ice they found was around seven metres, but Babb says these were difficult finds. 

“We were finding really deteriorated and heavily melted sea ice…. Fortunately, both scientifically and personally, it was reassuring to know that we did start to find some thicker ice [further south],” he said. 

Despite this area being several hundred kilometres away from the nearest Nunavut communities, like Grise Fiord and Resolute Bay, Babb says what happens up in the High Arctic will ripple down south where there are larger fisheries in operation. 

At the end of their expedition in October, the team attended a science day at Resolute Bay’s Qarmartalik School to show some of their work and exchange knowledge with the community.

Grade 11 student Kupaaq Idlout says he learned a lot about the presence of mercury and phytoplankton in the ocean. He was most surprised to hear about “the amount of salt in different areas [of Nunavut] even though they are so close together.” The National Snow and Ice Data Centre at the University of Colorado Boulder explains that older, thicker sea ice tends to have a lower salt concentration.

Teacher Rhonda McKenzie says she also hears community members talk about the changing ice conditions. 

“Some of the elders have told me that the ice is melting faster and that they could have traveled by sled to certain islands or places longer into the year … but now it’s kind of different,” she said. 

Babb says they’re pushing to get community members to help measure ice thickness when they’re out on the land, and hopefully some will join their voyage next year.

“They live on the land, they live on the ice, they spend a lot of time on the water. They have these intangible observations that we can’t collect,” he said. 

Related stories from around the North:

Greenland: Alarming, above-average ice loss in Greenland due to rising temperatures, Eye on the Arctic

Finland: Experts urge policy overhaul to address climate tipping point risks, Eye on the Arctic

Norway: Polar heat record. July average above 10°C, The Independent Barents Observer

Russia: Young mammoth remains discovered in Siberian permafrost after roughly 50,000 years, Reuters

Sweden: Another year of shrinking glaciers predicted in Sweden’s Far North, CBC News

United States: Bursting ice dam in Alaska highlights risks of glacial flooding around the globe, The Associated Press

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