Arctic
Methane Release and Rapid Temperature Rise are interlinked
The
image below shows methane readings on November 17, 2013 p.m.
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19
November, 2013
Very
high methane readings are present over the Laptev Sea, the East
Siberian Sea and the Beaufort Sea. The situation may be even worse
than what it seems at first glance. The pointed shape in the Laptev
Sea doesn't imply low methane levels in that area. The IASI (Infrared
Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer) instrument measuring
methane only covers a certain width. The pointed shapes that show up
on above image and the bottom inset, are areas where no measurements
were taken, resulting from the way the polar-orbiting satellite
circum-navigates the globe, as pictured on the top inset. These
pointed shapes are visible as light-grey areas on the image below.
Additionally,
no data were available for the areas colored darker grey on above
image. At lower altitudes, this absence of data can be due to
mountains in the area. It can also be that measurements are obscured
by clouds, in which case no data are visible for the respective area;
again, this doesn't imply that no methane was present there.
So,
while there are no data for some areas in the Laptev Sea on Nov. 17,
the conclusion must noretheless be that methane was actually present
at very high levels all the way from the Laptev Sea to the East
Siberian Sea. This conclusion is supported by data from earlier days,
e.g. as shown in
this post.
Therefore,
the situation in the Laptev Sea is worse that it looks at first
glance and levels may actually have been even higher on Nov. 17 than
the peak reading of 2304 ppb that was recorded on that day.
Similarly, more methane may actually be present closer to the North
Pole than is showing up on above images.
Why
methane is rising from the Arctic seabed
For
some time now, huge amounts of methane have been released from the
seabed of the Arctic Ocean, reaching the atmosphere at levels of up
to 2662 ppb (on
November 9, 2013).
What caused this? Before examining this further, let's first go back
to what was said in an earlier
post about
warm water off the coast of North Anmerica.
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A
dust storm approaches Stratford, Texas, in 1935. From: Wikipedia:
Dust Bowl
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During
the 1930s, North America experienced a devastating drought affecting
almost two-thirds of the United States as well as parts of Mexico and
Canada. The period is referred to as the Dust Bowl, for its numerous
dust storms.
Rapid
creation of farms and use of gasoline tractors had caused erosion at
massive scale.
Extensive
deep plowing of the virgin topsoil of the Great Plains in the
preceding decade had removed the natural deep-rooted vegetation that
previously kept the soil in place and trapped moisture even during
periods of drought and high winds.
So,
when the drought came, the dust storms emerged. But what caused the
drought?
A
2004 study concludes that the drought was caused by anomalous
tropical sea surface temperatures (SST) during that decade and that
interactions between the atmosphere and the land surface increased
its severity (see image above right with SST anomalies).
As
the above chart shows, SST anomalies in the days of the Dust Bowl
were not greater than 1°C. It is in this context that the current
situation in the Arctic must be seen. In 2013, SST anomalies of
5°C or more showed up in virtually all areas in the Arctic
Ocean where the sea ice disappeared; some areas are exposed to sea
surface temperature anomalies even higher than 8°C (14.4°F), as
discussed in the post Arctic
Ocean is turning red.
As
the above Naval Research Laboratory image shows, strong winds can
push a lot of sea ice out of the Arctic Ocean. The resulting absence
of sea ice can disrupt
vertical sea currents
that would otherwise cool the seabed. Furthermore, strong winds can
boost warming of the seabed of the Arctic Ocean by mixing warm
surface water down the vertical water column. Such feedbacks have
been discussed in earlier posts such as the Diagram
of Doom. Changes
that take place in the Arctic can also cause extreme weather patterns
elsewhere, as discussed in an earlier
post on changes to the Polar Jet Stream.
Indeed,
events can be closely interlinked and the world is now stumbling from
one extreme weather event into another. Moreover, things look set to
get worse every year. And this can in turn make things even
worse in the Arctic. Water off the coast of North America, after
reaching 'Record Warmest' temperatures in July 2013, proceeded to
travel to the Arctic Ocean, where it is now warming up the seabed.
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NOAA:
part of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of North America reached
record warmest temperatures in July 2013
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Below,
Malcolm Light explains:
Pollution
clouds pouring eastwards off the coast of Canada and the United
States are the main culprits in heating the Gulf Stream as this
region has the highest oceanic evaporation on Earth.
While
the mean speed of the Gulf Stream is 4 miles per hour (6.4 km/hour or
1.78 metres/second), the water slows down as it travels north. In the
much wider North Atlantic Current, which is its North Eastern
extension, water flows at about 0.51 metres/second (3.5 times slower)
while the West Spitzbergen (Svalbard) current flows at about 0.35
metres/second (5 times slower). Consequently, it will take quite some
time for the summer-heated Gulf Stream waters to reach the Laptev
Sea.
In
addition, because the Gulf Stream does a closed circuit in the
tropical Atlantic, passing close to West Africa (Canary Current) and
returning back to the Gulf along the hurricane tracks (North
Equitorial Current), it is able to continuously feed hot water into
the North Atlantic Current over a very long time period. This
explains why methane is continuously boiling off the subsea methane
hydrates from the Eurasian Basin and Laptev Sea during September to
November this year and will continue to be emitted past January 2014.
How
much will temperatures rise?
The
atmospheric temperature increase in Australia this year (0.22oC)
indicates that in 10 years it will exceed 2.2oC
and in 30 to 40 years, 6.6oC
to 8.8oC.
This
is the same as the predicted temperature increase from the Arctic
methane build up and will lead to total global deglaciation and our
extinction by the middle of this century.
There
is in addition a delayed carbon dioxide and methane temperature
anomaly of 12oC
to 20oC. The
20oC methane
delayed temperature anomaly is the same as the temperature anomaly of
the hot clouds that have been blowing around the Arctic this year,
indicating that the Arctic has almost caught up with the methane
delayed global warming heating.
The
stage is therefore set for a giant firestorm, drought and sea level
rise mostly caused by the uncontrolled build up of methane in the
atmosphere due to the carbon dioxide induced global warming
destabilization of the Arctic permafrost and subsea methane hydrates.
So,
what to do?
The
power, prestige and massive economy of the United States have been
built on cheap and abundant fossil fuels and Canada is now trying to
do the same. Will the US and Canada, in the short time frame we have
left (3 decades), be able to eliminate their extreme carbon
footprints? Note that Australia, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates have similar extreme carbon footprints as well. An
additional problem is that reducing emissions from coal-fired power
plants will also reduce sulfur emissions that currently mask the full
wrath of global warming.
A
Comprehensive Climate Plan must include ways to reduce methane levels
What
we have got to do is eliminate as much of the atmospheric methane by
whatever means we are able to devise, to bring its
concentration down to about 750 ppb. This level will eliminate the
methane delayed temperature anomaly and give the massive industrial
nations a little leaway to get their houses in order.
All
the scientific expenditure and ingenuity of the major industrial
nations should be engaged in developing methods of breaking down
atmospheric methane without burning it. Methods of increasing the
tropospheric and stratospheric hydroxyl concentrations and using
radio - laser systems such as the Alamo
- Lucy
projects and their applications to HAARP must be developed and tested
with the utmost urgency as should local methods of converting carbon
dioxide and methane via catalysts into other products. We have to get
rid of this methane monster before it devours us all. A French group
of scientists and engineers have started work on the Alamo-Lucy
projects in Europe. If we fail to reduce the fast growing methane
content of the atmosphere in the next few decades we are going to go
the same way as the dinosaurs.
I
cannot emphasise more, how serious humanity’s predicament is and
what we could do to try to prevent our certain extinction if we
continue down the present path we are following. If we compare
ourselves to the Titanic we are only moments away from hitting the
iceberg.
Three
more images are added below to further illustrate Malcolm Light's
words. The above image highlights how much temperatures have been
rising in the Arctic over the past few decades. In above image,
anomalies are visualized by latitude, but are averaged by longitude
globally, masking even higher anomalies that can be experienced at
specific areas along the same longitude. At times, some areas in the
Arctic do already experience anomalies of over 20°C, as also shown
by the image below.
Related
-
Causes of high methane levels over Arctic Ocean
-
Climate Plan
- Horrific
amounts of methane over Laptev Sea
-
Methane Levels going through the Roof
- Unfolding
Methane Catastrophe
- Methane
Release caused by Earthquakes
- Temperature
Rise
-
North Hole
-
The LUCY project
-
The Alamo Project
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