Good discussion, but most of the reasoning assumes continuity in system behavior. Granted, IPCC (or was it Stroeve and Notz 2018?, or some other expert opinion?) have said there are no identifiable tipping points with respect to future ASI decline. I have no standing to disagree with that, but I will anyway...
It seems to me that the gradualist, "continualist" perspective ignores some very potent discontinuous saltatory possibilities.
Contributing factors:
* Continued winter warming and less refreeze, especially with more extensive open water at end of the previous melt season.
* Younger, saltier, thinner, weaker, less concentrated ice.
* Rubblified/slushified ice with less (or no) pack constraint on movement.
* Increase of ocean heat absorption through reduced albedo through earlier (thus closer to solstice) and more extensive open water and melt pond area.
* More open water also leads to more dynamic ocean to air energy transfer and less thermal isolation.
* Lower ice-to-water ratio allows a higher portion of heat energy to go into warming water vs. high thermal input required to melt ice.
* Warmer and more dynamic Arctic atmosphere leads to stronger incursions of storm-driving warm air masses, including warm rain that can devastate ice.
* Continued warming of Atlantic, Pacific, and land-based water infiltration increases heat energy at the surface and subsurface.
* More active atmosphere and longer wind fetch over open water leads to greater wave action and vertical heat cycling. Even if that is not enough break through the thermocline it would still result in greater upward heat diffusion. And it might bring thermocline to surface in shallow areas.
* Hansen and others suggest that the global surface temperature increase may itself exceed the linear trend as warming oceans and saturated vegetation no longer continue to absorb CO2 additions at the same rate. In 2022 we are just past the bottom of the solar cycle (temperature response lags solar radiation curve by 1-2 years) and in a prolonged but probably fading La Nina phase. In 5 years the solar cycle will be reaching max upward influence and odds are that El Nino of some degree will be in effect.
* Less constricted export gateways through the CAA, Nares, and/or Fram.
Bonus/fantasy factor: I wonder what happens if/when Atlantic water incursion along the Siberian coast joins up with the Pacific water influx current that hugs the Alaskan-Canadian coast. Will that create an Arctic Ocean-wide toilet bowl swirl that functions as the equivalent of an 'anti-Beaufort Gyre MYI nursery' (RIP) that sweeps ice out of the Arctic Ocean through the southern-facing exit doors before it even has a chance to melt in place?
All of these forces are gathering strength simultaneously. While none of them individually is a tipping point, they have synergistic effects that could result in a tipping vortex not too many years from now. 5+5 =10. But 5*5 = 25.
Yes, I am ignoring negative feedbacks, but the exacerbating positive feedbacks in the foreseeable future seem to outweigh the suppressive negative feedbacks. Moreover, the more we learn about climate change, the new information more frequently (by a large margin) points to more rapid and radical change vs. less. Just this week Greenland melt rate estimate between now and 2100 essentially doubled. Just today new study that ECS temperature sensitivity to CO2 in past climates may be much higher than previously estimated due to low bias in oxygen isotope methodology. As for the "Slow Transition", yes FYI Extent increases rapidly. But in doing so it also creates a thin winter cover to hold in ocean heat during winter yet easily melted out the following summer, so there is no salvation there.
Extrapolating the straight-line trend of ASI volume decline suggests ~ 2030 for individual year chance of BOE reaching 50%. That trend was "tainted" by the rapid loss of MYI in the early 2000s, and the most recent 10 years have flatlined. But the observation that a single linear trend does not apply demonstrates that the ASI does not evolve in a smooth year-to-year progression. Instead it occurs as jumps between periods of punctuated equilibrium (just like biological evolution). The 42-year satellite-era record of ASI decline could be summarized as 22 years slow, 10 years fast, 10 years slow. The next 10 years may continue slow, but when the dam breaks the transition is likely to be precipitous. Convergence of a warm winter followed by strong early season melt weather, then a summer mid-latitude scale storm (Arctic hurricane?) compounded by high melt rate from greater portion of a shallower larger reservoir of subsurface heat reaching the surface compounded by mass export and lack of recharge from a depleted ESS/Laptev could synergistically cause a BOE within 10 years.
BOE won't happen this year. And it won't happen next year. And it won't happen for X years. Then in year Y it will happen in a flash surprising everybody.
The 2022 melt season is more interesting than a 12th place final Extent or Area minimum. As slushification continues a new more vulnerable Arctic is emerging. One example is the (new to me at least) continuous bleeding of ice through the Nares Strait all summer long. Ice that in the past would have piled up as fortress-like rafts against the CAA-CAB boundary. Not this time, and probably not again for a very long time.