The project ICEotopes set out to understand how the rapid loss of Arctic sea ice is reshaping the cycling of nutrients that sustain marine life. To achieve this, innovative chemical “fingerprints” – isotope tracers – were developed and applied to reveal the sources and transformations of key nutrients such as silicon, barium, cadmium, and zinc. Laboratory freezing experiments carried out under controlled conditions generated new datasets that simulate sea-ice growth and document how nutrients and trace elements are redistributed between ice and seawater. These results provide fresh insight into abiotic processes that were previously poorly understood. In parallel, major effort was invested in advancing isotope measurement techniques, enabling detection of very small changes in nutrient chemistry with high precision. Complementary analyses were conducted on samples collected during the international MOSAiC expedition and several Arctic summer cruises. These unique snow, sea-ice, and seawater samples now underpin the first comprehensive isotope datasets of their kind. Early findings demonstrate that concentrations of some trace metals (Cd, Zn) are too low to permit isotope analysis in Arctic sea ice based on available samples—an important result in itself, as it highlights the physicochemical limits of the system and helps identify the most suitable tracers. In addition, a strong influence of the parental seawater composition on trace-element distributions in sea ice has been observed. Overall, the project has fully met the objectives set for this reporting period, providing novel experimental and field data, refining analytical methods, and laying the foundation for large-scale observational studies of nutrient fluxes in the Arctic Ocean.