Review of air-ice-ocean processes in the Margial Ice Zone of importance for offshore activities in the Barents Sea region

In this report we have reviewed air-ice-ocean processes in the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ) of importance for offshore operations and related environmental issues. The MIZ is a characteristic feature of the circumpolar Arctic and sub-Arctic seas, i.e., the European, Russian, US and Canadian parts of the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sandven, Stein, Bertino, Laurent, Lisæter, Knut Arild, Sagen, Hanne, Kloster, Kjell, Babiker, Mohamed
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7541029
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7541029
Description
Summary:In this report we have reviewed air-ice-ocean processes in the Marginal Ice Zone (MIZ) of importance for offshore operations and related environmental issues. The MIZ is a characteristic feature of the circumpolar Arctic and sub-Arctic seas, i.e., the European, Russian, US and Canadian parts of the Arctic. The focus has been on the Barents Sea and adjacent regions where offshore exploration plans are quite extensive. The Barents Sea is partly ice- covered in the winter season in the northern and eastern regions. The sea ice in combination with wind, waves and currents provide harsh environmental conditions, especially in the winter. The MIZ can be defined as the zone extending from typical 100 km outside the ice edge to 100 km inside the ice edge, where certain air-ice-ocean processes dominate and have significant impact in the environment. The physical environment is determined by an integrated system of atmospheric, oceanic and sea ice processes, including wind, waves, ocean eddies, jets and current features, convergence/divergences, sea ice processes and their variability. Many of the processes are not well understood, because observations and modeling capability is not yet well developed. The uncertainty in description of many physical processes is a major reason for the large discrepancy between different climate model simulations in the Arctic. It is described first the general environmental and climate processes of the Arctic Ocean, providing and overview of scientific issues to be considered by offshore operators. The main atmospheric processes are reviewed regarding climate as well as meteorological conditions for operations in Arctic and sub-Arctic seas. The sea ice conditions are of major importance because the MIZ is defined by the extent and variability of the ice edge region. Sea ice is also the main constraint for offshore operations and transportation in the Arctic, and improved monitoring and forecasting of sea ice is therefore a major task to ensure safe and cost-efficient operations. The sea ...