2008(07)-2012-2016-2020-2024?
Is this the intrinsic mechanism of arctic?
Our brains *love* organizing what we sense into patterns. What played out over the time frame you reference is far messier, nothing intrinsic about it beyond the annual normal variations in insolation.
The change in dynamics I think actually *starts* in a serious way in the late 1990s. That's certainly were we start seeing the accelerated decrease in end of season volume that we have now.
Renerpho's comment may be prophetic; like the bizarre weather we had in 2013 & 2014 that pretty much saved the Arctic, the difference between what we have, and a more serious run at 2012 may be exactly that unusual movement of older ice into the Laptev where it's managed to survive.
Problem is, too much heat is being imported via Atlantification, and too much heat is being retained over-winter. Part of that is atmospheric - more CO2, more water vapor reducing re-radiation, or at least raising the bar for how much net enthalpy gets carried over year over year.
There's also the *imported* latent heat that is arriving in increasing volume because of the increasing instability of northern hemisphere atmospheric circulation. Constant Arctic Breakouts anyone? Flip side of that, is imported intrusions of heat from lower latitudes raising winter temperatures in the Arctic 30 degrees C. That imported heat replaces what would normally get pulled out of the Arctic ocean.
You can see the evidence of this most clearly by way of the annual minima and maxima dates slowly creeping closer together over winter. They're something like two weeks closer now than they were 30+ years ago.
So the problem really is, someday, over winter, the Arctic simply won't be able to dump heat and produce enough ice to survive even a relatively bland melt season. So I watch the weather in winter now more than I do the melt season. The heat the Arctic receives seasonally is very predictable, only affected really by Albedo. How much heat it loses? Not so much, at least, that which gets pulled directly from the Arctic ocean - the largest heat sink contributing the most to and driving the system's dynamics.
Like a top, slowly losing angular momentum, the transition from it spinning vertically to rolling around on the floor will be sudden, but not really a serious change in energy, just what it looks like. The last 20 years I think are the start of the "wobbles". Not that many left, I think.