Arctic sea ice has declined
significantly in recent decades. For example, the area of sea ice on September
15 averaged 7.3 million square kilometers in the 1980s, but decreased by more
than half to 3.6 million square kilometers by 2020. This decline in sea ice
has occurred mainly in the Pacific sector of the Arctic Ocean, and one of its
causes is an increase in northward heat transport by Pacific Summer Water. The
relatively warm Pacific Summer Water is transported from the Bering Sea, which is the marginal sea of the Pacific Ocean, to
the Chukchi Sea, which is the marginal sea of the Arctic Ocean, through the Bering
Strait from spring to autumn. Then, it is further transported to the
subsurface of the Canada Basin in the Arctic Ocean. It was pointed out that this
affects the surface water temperature of the Canada Basin in the Arctic Ocean,
contributing to the decline in sea ice in the Pacific sector of the Arctic
Ocean (for example, Shimada et al., 2006).