A campfire also changes the balance.
You, more than anybody else, should realize when an argumentation is lacking figures and a no-no.
As I said: just local effects, and effects that "move the needle" only during June and July.
Feel free to either follow a crash course in polar region dynamics or do the simplest arithmetic of comparing the order of magnitude of energy absorbed because the different albedo on one million square kilometres of lost sea ice at 70°N during May and the 2 to 3 sv stream of warmer waters coming from mid latitudes to compensate for the 2 to 3 sv stream of briney waters sinking around the points new ice is forming that very same month. That open waters around Iceland and north of Scotland, east of Norway and up to Svalbard should tell you something.
And before you say anything further, be sure to comprehend the more heat the ice-free ocean waters get from the sun, the less heat the whole Arctic gets from mid-latitude IF those open waters were caused by less ice being created.