Posts Tagged ‘seepage’

Methane release ‘looks stronger’

Fro­zen depo­si­to­ries are giving up methane to the sea

Sci­en­tists have unco­vered what appears to be a fur­ther dra­ma­tic increase in the lea­kage of methane gas that is seeping from the Arc­tic seabed.

Methane is about 20 times more potent than CO2 in trap­ping solar heat.

The fin­dings come from mea­su­re­ments of car­bon flu­xes around the north of Rus­sia, led by Igor Semile­tov from the Uni­ver­sity of Alaska at Fairbanks.

Methane release from the East Sibe­rian Shelf is under­way and it looks stron­ger than it was sup­po­sed [to be],” he said.

Pro­fes­sor Semile­tov has been stu­dy­ing methane see­page in the region for the last few deca­des, and leads the Inter­na­tio­nal Sibe­rian Shelf Study (ISSS), which has laun­ched mul­ti­ple expe­di­ti­ons to the Arc­tic Ocean.

The preli­mi­nary fin­dings of ISSS 2009 are now being pre­pa­red for publi­ca­tion, he told BBC News.

Methane see­page recor­ded last sum­mer was alre­ady the hig­hest ever mea­su­red in the Arc­tic Ocean.

High see­page

Acting as a giant fro­zen depo­sitory of car­bon such as CO2 and methane (often stored as com­pac­ted solid gas hydra­tes), Siberia’s shal­low shelf areas are incre­a­sin­gly sub­jec­ted to war­ming and are now giving up grea­ter amounts of methane to the sea and to the atmo­s­phere than recor­ded in the past.

This under­sea per­ma­frost was until recently con­side­red to be stable.

But now sci­en­tists think the release of such a power­ful green­house gas may acce­le­rate glo­bal warming.

Hig­her con­cen­tra­ti­ons of atmo­s­phe­ric methane are con­tri­bu­ting to glo­bal tem­pe­ra­ture rise; this in turn is pro­jec­ted to cause fur­ther per­ma­frost melting and the release of yet more methane in a feed­back loop.

A worst-case sce­na­rio is one where the feed­back pas­ses a tip­ping point and bil­li­ons of ton­nes of methane are released sud­denly, as has occur­red at least once in the Earth’s past.

Such sud­den relea­ses have been lin­ked to rapid increa­ses in glo­bal tem­pe­ra­tures and could have been a fac­tor in the mass extinc­tion of species.

Accor­ding to a report by the US Natio­nal Ocea­nic and Atmo­s­phe­ric Admi­nis­tra­tion (Noaa), the spring­time air tem­pe­ra­ture across the region in the period 2000–2007 was an aver­age of 4C hig­her than during 1970–1999.

That is the fas­test tem­pe­ra­ture rise on the pla­net, claims the university.

The recent thaw over the last decade means that some of the large reserve of car­bon from orga­nic mate­rial such as dead ani­mals and plants in sedi­ments is now being released into the sea and into our atmosphere.

Trap­ped below that is the methane hydrate now war­ming and lea­king through holes in the defros­ting sediments.

Pre­viously it was thought much of this gas was absor­bed into the sea.

But accor­ding to a recent report that Pro­fes­sor Semile­tov and his team com­pi­led for the environ­men­tal group WWF, the shal­low depth of arc­tic shel­ves means that methane is reaching the atmo­s­phere wit­hout reac­ting to become CO2 dis­sol­ved in the ocean.

Pro­fes­sor Semiletov’s fel­low rese­ar­cher aboard the Rus­sian ice­brea­ker that car­ries the ISSS team each year is Pro­fes­sor Orjan Gustafs­son from Stock­holm Uni­ver­sity in Sweden.

He said that methane mea­su­red in the atmo­s­phere around the region is 100 times hig­her than nor­mal back­ground levels, and in some cases 1,000 times higher.

‘No alarm’

Des­pite the high rea­dings, Pro­fes­sor Gustafs­son said that so far there was no cause for alarm, and stres­sed that fur­ther stu­dies were still necessary to deter­mine the exact cause of the methane seepage.

It is import­ant now to under­stand how fast it is being released and how much is being released,” he said.

Howe­ver, there is a real fear that glo­bal war­ming may cause Siberia’s sub­sea per­ma­frost to thaw.

Some esti­ma­tes put the amount of car­bon trap­ped in shelf per­ma­frost at 1,600 bil­lion ton­nes — roughly twice as much car­bon as in the atmo­s­phere now.

The release of this once cap­tive car­bon from desta­bi­li­sed ocean sedi­ments and per­ma­frost would have cata­stro­phic effect on our cli­mate and life on Earth, warn the scientists.

Read at: BBC

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