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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