The headline quote is over a month old, but, according to Google, it hasn’t been reprinted anywhere beyond the story on the official website of Denmark. That article opened:
New calculations show that the amount of melted inland ice in Greenland is 25-50% higher in 2010 than normally.
The big Arctic story this month has been NOAA’s 2010 Arctic Report Card, which found that, thanks to human-caused global warming, “Arctic of old is gone, experts warn,” as MNSBC put it. One NOAA scientist explained the importance of the Arctic as the canary in the coal mine: “Whatever is going to happen in the rest of the world happens first, and to the greatest extent, in the Arctic.”
But the rapid Arctic warming is important to our climate in its own right. It can directly alter our weather. It threatens to release vast quantities of carbon locked away in the previously frozen tundra (see Science stunner: Vast East Siberian Arctic Shelf methane stores destabilizing and venting: NSF issues world a wake-up call: “Release of even a fraction of the methane stored in the shelf could trigger abrupt climate warming”).
The rapid warming also threatens to accelerate sea level rise. The Report Card’s section on Greenland, written by an international team of experts, concludes: