I posted that in tabular form back
here, from 2000 onwards. I also included the Max, Min and Vol lost, not just the % of volume lost.
Note that as the %loss increases, the max volume is falling. So the actual total volume of ice lost is far less than the % curve shows.
Another interesting thing is that although the %loss for 2008/9 is lower than the %loss for 2007, the actual volume of ice lost is greater. Due to the larger start ice volume. So this picture is actually misrepresenting the situation somewhat. As we know the 1979 volume was much higher than the 2000's volume, significantly less % of ice volume loss could mean exactly the same actual volume lost than in the 2000's. If you follow me.
As importantly, the % ice loss in 2012 was 3.17% more than 2010. Yet the actual volume of ice lost overall, was almost exactly the same....
Statistics are great, but percentages can hide very different interpretations.
The chart in volume loss. Physical, not %, is:
Which is a totally different representation and a very different trend line. Adding 2014 into this will give a clearer picture.
What this shows to me is that the PIOMAS volume overall loss depends heavily on how much volume the model calculates has been re-created in the winter.
Which is why I am challenging the 2012-2013 winter re-growth specifically.