Temperatures
of 77 to 86 degrees all the way to the shores of the Arctic Ocean
causing more tundra fires
“But
now we find something even more ominous than evidence that human
global warming is moving the Jet Stream about all while pushing polar
amplification into such a high gear that the terms ‘Arctic Heat
Wave’ and ‘Tundra Fire’ have now become common meteorological
parlance. And that thing is a large and disturbing methane pulse.”
Large,
Troubling Methane Pulse Coincides With Arctic Heatwave, Tundra Fires
24
July, 2013
(Image
source: Arctic
Weather Maps)
During
a murder investigation, sometimes you find traces of smoke from a gun
fired in relation to the crime. In other cases, sometimes you find
the gun itself. Even more rarely, do you find a smoking gun dropped
at a still fresh crime scene. Such was the case with the Arctic
today.
The
crime scene: another anomalous Arctic heat wave. The suspect: human
caused climate change. The accessory: Arctic amplification. The
smoking gun: major methane emission in the Arctic.
****
Yesterday,
I reported that a large Arctic heat wave had settled over Siberia,
once again setting off tundra fires.
The heat wave was so intense that it pushed temperatures in a range
of 77 to 86 degrees all the way to the shores of the Arctic Ocean
even as it caused numerous massive blazes to emerge both on open
tundra and throughout Siberia’s arboreal forests. Atmospheric
conditions — a Jet Stream mangled by human caused climate change
and a large heat dome had enabled the formation of this heat wave.
But
now we find something even more ominous than evidence that human
global warming is moving the Jet Stream about all while pushing polar
amplification into such a high gear that the terms ‘Arctic Heat
Wave’ and ‘Tundra Fire’ have now become common meteorological
parlance. And that thing is a large and disturbing methane pulse.
On
July 21-23, a large methane emission in which numerous sources caused
atmospheric spikes to greater than 1950 parts per billion flared over
a wide region of Arctic Russia and the Kara Sea. This event was so
massive that an area of about 500 x 500 miles was nearly completely
filled with these higher readings even as a much broader region,
stretching about 2,000 miles in length and about 800 miles at its
widest, experienced scores of large pulses. You can see a visual
representation of these emissions in yellow on the image above,
provided by Methane Tracker which compiles data provided by NASA’s
Aqua Satellite.
As
noted above, this major event coincided with a large Arctic heat wave
and numerous tundra fires that raged throughout the region. Another
unprecedented occurrence in a summer of strange weather and mangled
climate.
Conditions
in Context
Average
global methane levels are currently around 1830 parts per billion.
This level, about 1130 parts per billion higher than the
pre-industrial average of 700 parts per billion represents an
additional global warming forcing equal to at least 28% of the added
CO2 forcing provided by humans. It has long been a concern among
scientists that the Arctic environment, as it is forced to warm by
human-caused climate change, would emit an additional significant
volume of methane from carbon stocks locked in tundra and in methane
stores sequestered on the sea bed. Since methane has between 25 and
105 times the heating potential of CO2, the possible added additional
warming is quite substantial.
In
the 2000s, a number of Arctic researchers found disturbing evidence
of methane emissions coming directly from the Arctic environment. In
2013, NASA began its CARVE mission to more clearly define the
Arctic’s response to human-caused warming. Its preliminary research
has found methane plumes as large as 150 miles across.
Overall,
the Arctic environment is already clearly adding its own methane to
the global mix. We can see this in local Arctic methane measurements
that average around 1900 parts per billion and above in many Arctic
locations. These readings are about 70 parts per billion above the
global average. This week’s large methane pulse where a broad
region experienced methane levels of 1950 to 1980 parts per billion
is
yet more evidence that the Arctic is beginning to provide a dangerous
and troubling amplifying feedback
to the already break-neck pace of human warming. In
total, around 2,500 gigatons of methane are thought to be locked in
carbon stores both in the Arctic tundra and in hydrates (frozen
methane and water) on the Arctic Ocean floor.
Though
a dangerous and troubling addition to a human-caused warming that is
already changing the world’s weather in harmful and damaging ways,
this particular methane pulse is not yet evidence of runaway global
warming. In a runaway, Arctic methane emissions would likely exceed
500 megatons per year, which would be enough to raise global levels
by about 150 parts per billion annually. Such a runaway would be a
global nightmare requiring an unprecedented human response if Earth’s
life support systems were to be preserved in any rough corollary to
what we enjoy today. Though such an event is probably still low-risk
(10-20 percent), it cannot be entirely ruled out due to the speed and
violence at which human greenhouse gas emissions are altering Earth
systems.
So
the prudent course would be for a rapid response as if such an event
were imminent. The reason is that a runaway methane emission in the
Arctic would cause severe and untold damage and harm.
To
this point, Peter Wadhams is warning that about 50 gigatons of
methane are at risk of rapidly destabilizing should the Arctic sea
ice melt in the next two years.
The region in which these methane stores are locked is the East
Siberian Arctic Shelf, a shallow sea that is very vulnerable to rapid
warming and methane release. Wadhams notes:
The
loss of sea ice leads to seabed warming, which leads to offshore
permafrost melt , which leads to methane release, which leads to
enhanced warming, which leads to even more rapid uncovering of
seabed. If a large release has not occurred by 2016 the danger will
be continuously increasing. It is thought that at 2-3C of global
warming, which means 6-8C of Arctic warming, methane release from
permafrost on land will be greatly increased.
Those
who understand Arctic seabed geology and the oceanography of water
column warming from ice retreat do not say that this is a low
probability event. I think one should trust those who know about a
subject rather than those who don’t. As far as I’m concerned, the
experts in this area are the people who have been actively working on
the seabed conditions in the East Siberian Sea in summer during the
past few summers where the ice cover has disappeared and the water
has warmed. The rapid disappearance of offshore permafrost through
water heating is a unique phenomenon, so clearly no “expert”
would have found a mechanism elsewhere to compare with this.
Perhaps,
equally troubling, is that large regions of permafrost are now also
thawing. In the Hudson Bay region, an area that saw unprecedented
heat, dry conditions and wildfires this year, permafrost
temperatures have risen by .45 degrees Celsius.
Peter Kershaw, an adjunct professor of earth sciences at the
University of Alberta, who was in Churchill recently on a research
project noted:
“It’s
a big concern and so far not well-quantified. That organic material
is being made available for decomposition. It’s out of the freezer
and sitting on the counter.”
Though
most climate scientists do not currently believe that such a rapid
release of methane is possible over such a short period, we do have
to ask ourselves — what if Wadhams and others like him are right?
In such a case we could see a catastrophic warming of up to 5 degrees
C by 2050, far beyond anything mainstream models or paleoclimate
would suggest. But the human rate of climate forcing that is now more
than ten times anything seen during the geological record puts us in
a context that is entirely out of previous reckoning. So these
warnings by Wadhams should be listened to, heeded, and taken into
account. (Hat Tip to commenter Colorado Bob for the head’s up on
these articles).
More
likely, however, is that a combination of methane release from the
tundra and the ocean floor and a loss of albedo (reflectivity) due to
ice sheet loss will result in an effective doubling or more of the
initial human greenhouse gas forcing over the coming decades and
centuries. Such a response is still very dangerous in that it risks
locking in, long term, already damaging changes to the world’s
environments. Should the Earth System fully respond to the 400 ppm
CO2 and 1120 ppb methane we’ve already emitted into the atmosphere,
we can expect at least a 3 degree Celsius global temperature increase
and long-term sea level rise of between 25 and 75 feet. Such changes
would severely damage both human infrastructure and the environments
upon which human-based agriculture depend for its now vast food
production. In addition, a 24% increase in the hydrological cycle and
a number of destabilizing changes to the world’s weather systems
would cause severe added damage.
A
rapid Earth Systems feedback response risks these changes at current
greenhouse gas levels. And since we are now seeing both methane
release and ice sheet response, a level of these feedbacks are
already in play, showing a far greater risk than initial forecasts
indicated. Further greenhouse gas emissions risk even more damaging
potentials, possibly locking in ever-greater consequences. For this
reason, any global policy that does not seek to fully mitigate such
new and over-riding risks by planning a complete phase out of carbon
emissions is an unconscionable policy to open the door to
immeasurable harm to human lives and the living systems of our world
upon which we depend.
These
first methane burps are a warning for us to act now, before our
capacity to act is seriously degraded and before events start to
spiral beyond the point of rational control. We have had other
warnings which we have, so far, mostly ignored. And though the
responses by the Obama Administration and World Bank to de-fund new
coal plants are encouraging, we should redouble our efforts now, lest
we enter an age of bitter regret as the consequences of our carbon
emission form a trap that is difficult or impossible to escape.
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