Climate change: Arctic Report Card shows region transforming faster than expected
Boulder: The Arctic is transforming faster and with more far-reaching consequences than scientists expected just 20 years ago, when the first Arctic Report Card assessed the state of Earth’s far northern environment.
The snow season is dramatically shorter today, sea ice is thinning and melting earlier, and wildfire seasons are getting worse. Increasing ocean heat is reshaping ecosystems as non-Arctic marine species move northward.
Thawing permafrost is releasing iron and other minerals into rivers, which degrades drinking water. And extreme storms fueled by warming seas are putting communities at risk.
The past water year, October 2024 through September 2025, brought the highest Arctic air temperatures since records began 125 years ago, including the warmest autumn ever measured and a winter and a summer that were among the warmest on record. Overall, the Arctic is warming more than twice as fast as the Earth as a whole.
For the 20th Arctic Report Card, we worked with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, an international team of scientists and Indigenous partners from across the Arctic to track environmental changes in the North – from air and ocean temperatures to sea ice, snow, glaciers and ecosystems – and the impacts on communities.
Together, these vital signs reveal a striking and interconnected transformation underway that’s amplifying risks for people who live there.
Arctic warming is intensifying the region’s water cycle.
A warmer atmosphere increases evaporation, precipitation and meltwater from snow and ice, adding and moving more water through the climate system.
That leads to more extreme rainstorms and snowstorms, changing river flows and altering ecosystems.
The Arctic region saw record-high precipitation for the entire 2025 water year and for spring, with the other seasons each among the top-five wettest since at least 1950.