If you have ice and water in local thermal equilibrium, then you cant suddenly raise the temperature or decrease it: to increase or decrease the temperature one must add or remove heat. At a phase transition the temperature doesn't change when adding or removing heat, but part of the ice will melt or part of the water will freeze. So phase changes are temperature buffers, and can buffer an amount of heat.
As the arctic ice will disappear we will not just loose a few shiny white objects, but we will loose a heat buffer, to the tune of 334 kJ/kg ... times 18 000 cubic kilometers. That is 6 x 10 ^ 21 Joules.
Check this graph (note the zero is absolute):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Measurement_of_sea_ice#/media/...
We are going to witness the loss of a huge thermal buffer in a few decades at most.