I also have some bonus info looking ahead, the SAT and SLP comparison map for July 16th-31st I'll be using for next month's July analysis:
This map perfectly shows melting momentum in action, in my opinion. Practically every year saw cyclones taking over the show during the latter half of July, except for 2007. And if you look carefully at the trend lines on the IJIS SIE graph for the last 10 days of the month, you see all of them levelling off:
The only years still going strong, are 2007 and 2012. 2007 because the dipole persists, causing plenty of melting, compaction and transport. 2012 because of all the melting potential built up in preceding weeks, lots of melt ponds, high SSTs, also helped by low volume at the start of the melting season, of course.
Rebound years 2013 and 2014 almost come to a complete standstill during this period (no melting momentum built up during cold and/or cloudy May and June), 2010 already had problems in the first two weeks of July, but 2011 perfectly shows how a change in weather conditions immediately puts a brake on rate of decrease.
I'm pretty certain the same would happen this year, but as we know, the forecast shows a prolongation of current weather conditions:
The forecast for days 7-10 show the high moving over to Siberia, but this nonetheless means 6 more days of melting momentum build-up, with the heat starting to bleed through on the SIA and SIE charts. It will be interesting to see what happens when weather conditions switch, and whether this late melting momentum can sustain the rates somewhat. If weather conditions don't switch, I'll start believing 2007 and 2011 can be overtaken.
Will the second half of July this year produce a SLP map with some green and yellow in or near the centre of the Arctic, for the first time since 2007?