September 2025 Arctic Ice Beats Expectations

 MI Figure 1. Distribution of SIO contributions for July estimates of September 2025 pan-Arctic sea-ice extent. Public/citizen contributions include Sun.

July 2025 was the final report of the Sea Ice Prediction Network (SIPN) before the actual September monthly extent is reported by NOAA Sea Ice Index (SII). The report (link in red) gave this overview.

2025: July Report from Sea Ice Prediction Network

The July 2025 Outlook received 22 pan-Arctic contributions (Figure 1). This year’s median forecasted value for pan-Arctic September sea-ice extent is 4.27 million square kilometers with an interquartile range of 4.13 to 4.54 million square kilometers. This is lower than observed in 2023 (4.37 million square miles) and 2024 (4.35 million square miles) observed in September. The lowest sea-ice extent forecast is 3.38 million square kilometers, from Sun, which would be a new record low for the satellite period (1979-present); the highest sea-ice extent forecast is 5.17. . . The observed extent values are from the NSIDC Sea Ice Index (Fetterer et al., 2017), based on the NASA Team algorithm sea ice concentration fields distributed by the NASA Snow and Ice Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC) at NSIDC (DiGirolamo et al., 2022; Meier et al., 2021). 

These are predictions as of August 20 for the September 2025 monthly average ice extent reported by NOAA Sea Ice Index (SII). This post provides a look at the 2025 September monthly averages comparing MASIE and SII datasets. (19 year average is 2007 to 2025 inclusive).

To enlarge, open image in new tab.

SIP network predicted SII would be 4.27M km2, and the actual result is 4.7M, while MASIE reported 5.0M km2.

The table below provides the monthly Arctic ice extent averages for comparisons (all are M km2)

Monthly MASIE 2025 SIIv.4 2025 MASIE -SII MASIE-19yr AVE SIIv.4-19yr AVE
Jan 13.206 13.131 0.075 -0.583 -0.470
Feb 13.802 13.745 0.057 -0.878 -0.715
Mar 14.274 14.140 0.134 -0.587 -0.545
Apr 13.846 13.910 -0.063 -0.249 -0.109
May 12.497 12.559 -0.062 -0.119 -0.108
June 10.510 10.485 0.025 -0.306 -0.388
July 7.942 7.660 0.282 -0.345 -0.375
Aug 5.854 5.395 0.459 -0.020 -0.220
Sept 4.990 4.745 0.245 0.298 0.050

The first two data columns are the 2025 YTD shown by MASIE and SII, with the MASIE surpluses in column three.  Column four shows MASIE 2025 compared to MASIE 19 year averages, while column five shows SII 2025 compared to SII 19 year averages.   MASIE started the year in deficits to average but recovered in spring to virtually match average in August, and now 298k km2 above average. SII was below its averages throughout and much lower than MASIE in July, and in August down by nearly half a Wadham. That gap reduced to -245k km2 in September.

Current Arctic Ice Extent Conditions

The month of September shows the annual dip in arctic ice extents, then recovering to end slightly higher than the beginning.  Note MASIE 2025 started 170k km2 above average and ended 316k in surplus. SII v.4 began 319k km2 in deficit to MASIE and ended 153k lower.

The table below shows the distribution of ice over the Arctic regions yesterday September 30, 2025, in comparison with the MASIE average and some other years of note.

Region 2025273 Day 273 ave. 2025-Ave. 2007273 2025-2007
 (0) Northern_Hemisphere 5265296 4947157 318139 4086883 1178413
 (1) Beaufort_Sea 567776 546476 21301 498743 69033
 (2) Chukchi_Sea 382991 220747 162244 51 382940
 (3) East_Siberian_Sea 502004 299345 202660 311 501693
 (4) Laptev_Sea 229451 168694 60758 235245 -5793
 (5) Kara_Sea 992 36279 -35287 15367 -14375
 (6) Barents_Sea 0 13476 -13476 4851 -4851
 (7) Greenland_Sea 170295 239645 -69350 353210 -182915
 (8) Baffin_Bay_Gulf_of_St._Lawrence 77930 55264 22665 42247 35682
 (9) Canadian_Archipelago 379648 370610 9038 307135 72513
 (10) Hudson_Bay 5071 3054 2017 1936 3135
 (11) Central_Arctic 2947568 2992334 -44766 2626511 321057

The massive surpluses in Eurasian basins of Chukchi, E. Siberian and Laptev more than offset smaller deficits in Atlantic basins Kara and Greenland seas. The over surplus was 318k km2 or 6.4%, and exceeded 2007 by 1.2 wadhams of ice extents.

Summary

The experts involved in SIPN expected SII 2025 September to be somewhat lower than recent years, but Arctic ice extents exceeded the 19 year averages.

Footnote:

Some people unhappy with the higher amounts of ice extent shown by MASIE continue to claim that Sea Ice Index is the only dataset that can be used. This is false in fact and in logic. Why should anyone accept that the highest quality picture of ice day to day has no shelf life, that one year’s charts can not be compared with another year? Researchers do this, including Walt Meier in charge of Sea Ice Index. That said, I understand his interest in directing people to use his product rather than one he does not control. As I have said before:

MASIE is rigorous, reliable, serves as calibration for satellite products, and continues the long and honorable tradition of naval ice charting using modern technologies. More on this at my post Support MASIE Arctic Ice Dataset

MASIE: “high-resolution, accurate charts of ice conditions”
Walt Meier, NSIDC, October 2015 article in Annals of Glaciology.

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