This report mentions methane release as a POSSIBILITY - it is already a reality, as we have reported.
Arctic ice melt 'like adding 20 years of CO2 emissions'
Arctic ice melt 'like adding 20 years of CO2 emissions'
The
loss of Arctic ice is massively compounding the effects of greenhouse
gas emissions, ice scientist Professor Peter Wadhams has told BBC
Newsnight.
BBC,
6
September, 2012
White
ice reflects more sunlight than open water, acting like a parasol.
Melting
of white Arctic ice, currently at its lowest level in recent history,
is causing more absorption.
Prof
Wadhams calculates this absorption of the sun's rays is having an
effect "the equivalent of about 20 years of additional CO2 being
added by man".
The
sea ice extent at 26 August (white) is markedly different from the
1979-2000 average (orange line)
The
Cambridge University expert says that the Arctic ice cap is "heading
for oblivion".
In
1980, the Arctic ice in summer made up some 2% of the Earth's
surface. But since then the ice has roughly halved in area.
"Thirty
years ago there was typically about eight million square kilometres
of ice left in the Arctic in the summer, and by 2007 that had halved,
it had gone down to about four million, and this year it has gone
down below that," Prof Wadhams said.
And
the volume of ice has dropped, with the ice getting thinner:
"The
volume of ice in the summer is only a quarter of what it was 30 years
ago and that's really the prelude to this final collapse," Prof
Wadhams said.
Parts
of the Arctic Ocean are now as warm in summer as the North Sea is in
winter, Prof Wadhams said.
Radiation
absorbed
The
polar ice cap acts as a giant parasol, reflecting sunlight back into
the atmosphere in what is known as the albedo effect.
But
white ice and snow reflect far more of the sun's energy than the open
water that is replacing it as the ice melts.
Instead
of being reflected away from the Earth, this energy is absorbed, and
contributes to warming:
"Over
that 1% of the Earth's surface you are replacing a bright surface
which reflects nearly all of the radiation falling on it with a dark
surface which absorbs nearly all.
"The
difference, the extra radiation that's absorbed is, from our
calculations, the equivalent of about 20 years of additional CO2
being added by man," Prof Wadhams said.
If
his calculations are correct then that means that over recent decades
the melting of the Arctic ice cap has put as much heat into the
system as all the CO2 we have generated in that time.
And
if the ice continues to decline at the current rate it could play an
even bigger role than greenhouse gases.
UK
weather effect
Professor
Wadhams stresses that there are uncertainties - cloud cover over the
Arctic could change and help reflect back some of the sun's
radiation.
But
then another greenhouse gas - methane, currently trapped in the
Arctic permafrost - could be released with warming and make matters
worse.
The
melting ice could have knock-on effects in the UK. Adam Scaife, from
the Met Office Hadley Centre told Newsnight it could help explain
this year's miserable wet summer, by altering the course of the jet
stream.
"Some
studies suggest that there is increased risk of wet, low pressure
summers over the UK as the ice melts."
There
may be an effect for our winters too: "Winter weather could
become more easterly cold and snowy as the ice declines," Mr
Scaife said.
Opinions
vary on the date of the demise of summer sea ice. The Met Office says
it is not expecting the Arctic to be completely ice-free in summer
until after 2030.
To
see the video GO
HERE
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