A BOE requires a sufficiently large heat budget combined with a rate of transport (into and out of the Arctic) that exceeds the ability of local conditions to maintain temperatures that overwhelm the ice.
Into and out of??? The heat has been building there since at least 1800. The issue is transport up and down, not in and out.
Yes, heat has been building for a long time, I'm aware of that.
Yes, for the heat *
currently in the Arctic Ocean* the reason why it hasn't melted the ice and kept it off year round has to do with the mechanics of vertical transport of heat in the water column.
All else being equal, if the system were static, that heat would never arrive at the surface in sufficient quantity to melt out the ice.
My point was and is, that those dynamics are changing, and what will make more of that heat accessible - and contribute first to a summer BOE - later to a year round BOE - is the continued transport and accumulation of heat in the ocean.
The heat *has* to accumulate in the system until such point as one of two things happen:
(1) It exists in sufficient quantity that the current vertical transport mechanisms can move enough of it that it overwhelms the ice or
(2) The volume of heat itself changes the dynamics of the system such that it is present at the sea surface in enough quantity that outgoing heat loss is insufficient to lower temperatures to where it will freeze.
The annual heat budget - heat imported via currents, captured via insolation, delivered by precipitation, and how fast it exits the atmosphere as radiation - will determine how soon one of those two events takes place. Eventually the total heat will be sufficient that a pendulum swing (the weather) will take out the ice.
Absent massive intervention, the only argument right now is how soon that will take place.
-J