Note, this is not from a blog post, nut from the august scientific publication, Scientific American
More
Than 150,000 Methane Seeps Appear as Arctic Ice Retreats
Scientists
continue to discover more and more of the powerful greenhouse gas
escaping from the thawing Arctic
22
May, 2012
Scientists
have found more than 150,000 sites in the Arctic where methane is
seeping into the atmosphere, according to a report published Sunday
in the journal Nature Geoscience.
Aerial
and ground surveys in Alaska and Greenland revealed that many of the
methane seeps are located in areas where glaciers are receding or
permafrost is thawing as the climate warms, removing ice that has
trapped the potent greenhouse gas in the ground.
Researchers
at the University of Alaska and Florida State University say the
amount of methane being released from the seeps now is relatively
small but could grow in coming decades as climate change intensifies,
shrinking the ice that has prevented ancient deposits of the
heat-trapping gas from reaching the atmosphere.
"As
permafrost thaws and glaciers retreat, it is going to let something
out that has had a lid on it," said lead author Katey Walter
Anthony of the University of Alaska.
Scientists
have long known of the existence of methane seeps in the Arctic, but
the new study is one of the first to map them over large areas.
Walter
Anthony and her colleagues used airplanes to fly over 6,700 lakes in
Alaska during the winters of 2008, 2009 and 2010.
The
survey revealed 77 previously unknown seep sites, which the
scientists narrowed down to 50 lakes they visited on foot.
They
documented the seeps they found, using carbon-dating to determine the
age of methane released at the sites. The scientists performed the
same analysis at 25 lakes in western Greenland.
Seep
sites in Alaska tended to occur where permafrost is thawing or at the
edges of receding glaciers. In Greenland, the scientists found seeps
in places where glaciers have retreated over the past 150 years,
since the end of the Little Ice Age.
The
researchers calculate that methane seeps in Alaska alone are
releasing 250,000 metric tons of methane into the atmosphere each
year, 50 to 70 percent more than previously estimated.
Here
too is an interesting letter:
Okay…
let’s make a quick calculation here.
>>Methane
seeps in Alaska alone are releasing 250,000 metric tons of methane
into the atmosphere each year<<
If
we include Canada, Greenland, Scandinavia and Siberia, we may make a
conservative gesstimate than at 1,500,000 yearly metric tons, Canada
being about two times the size of Alaska, Greenland one, Scandinavia
one, and Siberia three times the size.
Considering
methane is over 20 (some say 24) times as strong as CO2 as a GHG, let
us call it a 20. So this is equivalent to 30,000,000 metric tons of
CO2.
This
roughly doubles the total output, which is estimated at 30,000,000
(according to the IEA at
http://www.iea.org/co2highlights/co2highlights.pdf) or 50,000,000
(according to IPCC at
http://www.ipcc.ch/pdf/assessment-report/ar4/wg3/ar4-wg3-ts.pdf)
So
all prior models, estimates, calculations and wild goose chases must
be reviewed by an increase of 50 to 100 percent.
The
real problem is that this is current outgassing. There is nothing in
place to avoid a total Arctic thaw, once it will only gat warmer,
considering this positive (runaway) feedback loop and the albedo one
(white ice reflects more sunlight than dark land or water).
This
may nudge the global climate away from the small region of negative
(self-regulating) feedback loop which prevails at 12 to 15 degrees.
What then?
If
we look at world temperatures across the ages, we notice it was
almost always at either 12 to 15, or else at 24 to 28 degrees
Celsius. See the graphs in the following Contrarian sites, along with
their average ranges:
http://www.americanthinker.com/2009/01/co2_fairytales_in_global_warmi.html
(12
C – 22 C)
http://strongasanoxandnearlyassmart.blogspot.com.br/2011/01/for-several-years-i-have-immersed.html
(12
C – 25 C) - (this is the same as the NASA graph)
http://www.stuffintheair.com/ancient-climates.html
(12
C – 27 C)
http://earthintime.com/earthintime.html
(15
C – 22 C)
http://www.nctimes.com/app/blogs/wp/?p=5373
(12
C – 25 C)
Hence,
the IPCC may be unrealistically optimistic in aiming at a 3 to 6
Celsius warming. It may be that we can only get either of the stable
saddle points, the Cool (Today / Quaternary, Ordovician, Silurian and
Permian) or the Warm (Cambrian, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous,
Triassic, Jurassic, Cretaceous).
I
hope I am mistaken, but we may well be headed back to the Global
Tropic of the Dinos. All thanks to lovely Big Oil. We could have
electric cars since the 70s, there were several inventors who
vanished who have developed viable alternatives.
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