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Northern Europe Rings In New Year With An Ice-Free Baltic Sea

Earth observation photo of the baltic sea.
by Tarmu Tammerk
Tallinn (AFP) Jan 02, 2007
Northern Europeans were poised to celebrate the passage to the New Year in a way that is out of the ordinary for them: with an ice-free Baltic Sea. "It's quite unusual that we welcome the New Year with no ice in the Baltic Sea," Tarmo Kouts, senior researcher at the Estonian Marine Institute, told AFP.

Temperatures in Estonian coastal waters are warmer by one degree Celsius (around three degrees Fahrenheit) than at the end of last year, Kouts said.

"The temperature of 1C in the Bay of Parnu means conditions are ready for ice formation, if only we had at least a week of sub-zero temperatures," Kouts said.

"But the forecast shows mild weather continuing into the New Year."

Still, he assured, the sea could freeze this winter.

"It would take up to 10 days of freezing temperatures and we would see ice forming in the coastal areas," Kouts said.

"It's too early to rule out ice altogether for this winter."

Winters with little ice in the Baltic Sea are happening more frequently, and often it is only the Bay of Parnu in Estonia and the Gulf of Bothnia near Finland and Sweden that develop a layer of ice. The warm winters of recent years stem from climatic change, but do not yet indicate an irreversible trend, Kouts said.

According to Kouts, the last time the region had particularly warm winters was in the late 1980s and early 1990s, when four winters in a row saw above-average temperatures.

To find a similar series of warm winters before that, you would have to go back several hundred years, he said.

Meanwhile, the winter of 2002-2003 was significantly colder than average, Kouts said.

The ice-free Baltic waters do not pose a threat to plants or fish, he said.

"If the temperature fluctuates within a range of five degrees, there'll be no adverse effect on marine fauna and flora," Kouts said.

"Nature will adapt to the changing conditions."

The only headache is for fishermen.

"Fish are eating too much and getting fat in the current conditions," Kouts said.

Fishermen prefer lean fish, which give a better quality, firmer flesh when cooked, he said.

"Fishermen say there's not much sense in catching the fat fish as they are too flaky and fall apart" when cooked, Kouts said.

Meanwhile, as Estonians wait for ice to form on the Baltic Sea, the very thin layer of ice that has formed on some small lakes and rivers in the most northerly of the Baltic states has claimed two lives.

Two children drowned in southern Estonia Thursday after falling through a layer of thin ice on a river.

Source: Agence France-Presse

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