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Methane bubbles in Arctic seas stir warming fears

In this file photo NASA satel­lite image from Sep­tem­ber 21, 2005 and released on Sep­tem­ber 21, 2007 shows Arc­tic sum­mer sea ice cover­age in 2005.

Large amounts of a power­ful green­house gas are bubb­ling up from a long-frozen seabed north of Sibe­ria, rai­sing fears of far big­ger leaks that could stoke glo­bal war­ming, sci­en­tists said.

It was unclear, howe­ver, if the Arc­tic emis­si­ons of methane gas were new or had been going on unno­ti­ced for cen­tu­ries — since before the Indus­trial Revo­lu­tion of the 18th cen­tury led to wide use of fos­sil fuels that are bla­med for cli­mate change.

The study said about 8 mil­lion ton­nes of methane a year, equi­va­lent to the annual total pre­viously esti­ma­ted from all of the world’s oceans, were seeping from vast stores long trap­ped under per­ma­frost below the seabed north of Russia.

Sub­sea per­ma­frost is losing its abi­lity to be an imper­me­able cap,” Nata­lia Shak­hova, a sci­en­tist at the Uni­ver­sity of Fair­banks, Alaska, said in a state­ment. She co-led the study publis­hed in Friday’s edi­tion of the jour­nal Science.

The experts mea­su­red levels of methane, a gas that can be released by rot­ting vege­ta­tion, in water and air at 5,000 sites on the East Sibe­rian Arc­tic Shelf from 2003-08. In some pla­ces, methane was bubb­ling up from the seabed.

Pre­viously, the sea floor had been con­side­red an imper­me­able bar­rier sea­ling methane, Shak­hova said. Cur­rent methane con­cen­tra­ti­ons in the Arc­tic are the hig­hest in 400,000 years.

GLOBAL WARMING

No one can ans­wer this ques­tion,” she said of whe­ther the ven­ting was cau­sed by glo­bal war­ming or by natu­ral fac­tors. But a pro­jec­ted rise in tem­pe­ra­tures could qui­cken the thaw.

It’s good that these emis­si­ons are docu­men­ted. But you can­not say they’re incre­a­sing,” Mar­tin Hei­mann, an expert at the Max Planck Insti­tute for Bio­geo­che­mis­try in Ger­many who wrote a sepa­rate arti­cle on methane in Sci­ence, told Reuters.

These leaks could have been occur­ring all the time” since the last Ice Age 10,000 years ago, he said. He wrote that the release of 8 mil­lion ton­nes of methane a year was “negli­gi­ble” com­pa­red to glo­bal emis­si­ons of about 440 mil­lion tonnes.

Shakhova’s study said there was an “urgent need” to moni­tor the region for pos­si­ble future chan­ges since per­ma­frost traps vast amounts of methane, the second most com­mon green­house gas from human activi­ties after car­bon dioxide.

Moni­to­ring could resolve if the ven­ting was “a steadily ongo­ing pheno­me­non or signals the start of a more mas­sive release period,” accor­ding to the sci­en­tists, based at U.S., Rus­sian and Swe­dish rese­arch institutions.

The release of just a “small frac­tion of the methane held in (the) East Sibe­rian Arc­tic Shelf sedi­ments could trig­ger abrupt cli­mate war­ming,” they wrote.

The shelf has some­ti­mes been above sea level during the earth’s history. When sub­mer­ged, tem­pe­ra­tures rise by 12–17 degrees Cel­sius (22–31 F) since water is war­mer than air. Over thousands of years, that may thaw sub­mer­ged permafrost.

About 60 per­cent of methane now comes from human activi­ties such as land­fills, cattle rea­ring or rice pad­dies. Natu­ral sour­ces such as wet­lands make up the rest, along with poorly under­s­tood sour­ces such as the oceans, wild­fi­res or termites.

Most stu­dies about methane focus on per­ma­frost on land. But the shelf below the Lap­tev, East Sibe­rian and Rus­sian part of the Chuck­chi sea is three times the size of Siberia’s wetlands.

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Als Hüter dieses Planeten liegt es in unserer Verantwortung, alle Spezies mit Freundlichkeit zu behandeln. Viele fühlen sich durch Tierrechtskampagnen beleidigt. Das ist lächerlich. Sie sind nicht so schlimm wie der massenhafte Tod in Tierfabriken.  — Richard Gere