'Completely
Terrifying': Study Warns Carbon-Saturated Oceans Headed Toward
Tipping Point That Could Unleash Mass Extinction Event
"Once
we're over the threshold...you're dealing with how the Earth works,
and it goes on its own ride."
by Julia
Conley, staff writer
9
July, 2019
The
continuous accumulation of carbon dioxide in the planet's
oceans—which shows no sign of stopping due to humanity's relentless
consumption of fossil fuels—is likely to trigger a chemical
reaction in Earth's carbon cycle similar to those which happened just
before mass extinction events, according to a new study.
MIT
geophysics professor Daniel Rothman released new data on Monday
showing that carbon levels today could be fast approaching a tipping
point threshold that could trigger extreme ocean acidification
similar to the kind that contributed to the Permian–Triassic mass
extinction that occurred about 250 million years ago.
Rothman's
new research comes two years after he predicted that a mass
extinction event could take place at the end of this century. Since
2017, he has been working to understand how life on Earth might be
wiped out due to increased carbon in the oceans.
"If
we push the Earth system too far, then it takes over and determines
its own response—past that point there will be little we can do
about it."
—Timothy
Lenton, University of Exeter
Rothman
created a model in which he simulated adding carbon dioxide to
oceans, finding that when the gas was added to an already-stable
marine environment, only temporary acidification occurred.
When
he continuously pumped carbon into the oceans, however, as humans
have been doing at greater and greater levels since the late 18th
century, the ocean model eventually reached a threshold which
triggered what MIT called "a cascade of chemical feedbacks,"
or "excitation," causing extreme acidification and
worsening the warming effects of the originally-added carbon.
Over
the past 540 million years, these chemical feedbacks have occurred at
various times, Rothman noted.
But
the most significant occurances took place around the time of four
out of the five mass extinction events—and today's oceans are
absorbing carbon far more quickly than they did before the
Permian–Triassic extinction, in which 90 percent of life on Earth
died out.
The
planet may now be "at the precipice of excitation," Rothman
told MIT News.
On
social media, one critic called the study's implications about life
on Earth "completely terrifying."
The
study, which was completed with support from NASA and the National
Science Foundation, also notes that even though humans have only been
pumping carbon into the oceans for hundreds of years rather than the
thousands of years it took for volcanic eruptions and other events to
bring about other extinctions, the result will likely be the same.
"Once
we're over the threshold, how we got there may not matter,"
Rothman told MIT News. "Once you get over it, you're dealing
with how the Earth works, and it goes on its own ride."
Other
scientists said the study, which will be published this week in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, represents a clear
call for immediate action to drastically reduce the amount of carbon
that is being pumped into the world's oceans. Climate action groups
and grassroots movements have long called on governments to impose a
moratorium on fossil fuel drilling, which pumps about a billion
metric tons of carbon into the atmosphere every year.
"We
already know that our CO2-emitting actions will have consequences for
many millennia," says Timothy Lenton, a professor of climate
change and earth systems science at the University of Exeter. "This
study suggests those consequences could be much more dramatic than
previously expected."
"If
we push the Earth system too far," Lenton added, "then it
takes over and determines its own response—past that point there
will be little we can do about it."
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