This
is from a New Zealand blog
ARCTIC
SEA ICE TIME BOMB TICKING: THE BANG’S GONNA BE HUGE
24
July, 2013
Reading
this
press release
about a new
paper
in Palaeogeography,
Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology
spoiled my day. It might not be obvious to a casual reader just
glancing through the morning news — but a couple of paragraphs
leapt out at me:
Atmospheric
carbon dioxide concentrations recently reached 400 parts per million
for the first time since the Pliocene Epoch, three million years ago.
During this era, Arctic surface temperatures were 15-20 degrees
Celsius warmer than today’s surface temperatures.
Ballantyne’s
findings suggest that much of the surface warming likely was due to
ice-free conditions in the Arctic. That finding matches estimates of
land temperatures in the Arctic during the same time. This suggests
that atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations of 400 ppm may be
sufficient to greatly reduce the spatial extent and seasonal
persistence of Arctic sea ice.
In
other words, losing Arctic sea ice brings huge warming to the lands
around the Arctic Ocean. This is extremely bad news for a number of
reasons:
We’re
losing the Arctic sea ice well ahead of any schedule derived from
model predictions. The sea ice summer minimum could drop below 1
million km2
within a decade. I have argued
that it might be even sooner…
Arctic
warming and sea ice losses are already impacting northern hemisphere
weather patterns.
Once
the summer sea ice has gone, it’s only a question of how long it
will take for the winter ice to disappear. When I last looked at this
issue, three years ago, I suggested
this might happen much sooner than anyone expected — perhaps by the
2040s.
When
I wrote that post, I suggested that — if we were unlucky — winter
ice loss could be within the current climate commitment — that is,
within the warming we would expect to see from current levels of
greenhouse gases. Ballantyne et al’s new paper explicitly supports
that view.
The
consequences of warming of 10ºC to 20ºC on the lands around the
Arctic Ocean are horrendous. Recent
research
suggests that total warming of as little as 1.5ºC could be enough to
start major releases of methane as permafrost in Alaska, Canada and
Siberia melts. There are also huge deposits of methane beneath the
East Siberian Shelf (ESS) that are already beginning to discharge to
the atmosphere as their permafrost cap begins to disintegrate under a
warming ocean.
A
persistent large scale release of methane would transform the global
climate system and make efforts to contain warming by reducing
anthropogenic emissions more or less futile. We would be heading far
beyond 2ºC deep into the realms of catastrophe.
Just
to complete my bad day, this Guardian
report
on a new paper modelling the economic costs of a 50 Gt methane
release from the ESS suggests that the impact would generate an
“extra $60 trillion (net present value) of mean climate change
impacts” — comparable to total global GDP at present. World
economy over, in other words.
This
should be headline news. It should be plastered all over the front
pages of newspapers and web sites around the world. TV pundits should
be demanding action from the politicians who have put action on
emissions reductions in the “too hard” basket. The evidence is
beginning to suggest that Wally Broecker’s angry
beast,
fed up with being prodded with ever bigger sticks, is going to bite
back hard — and bite back soon. Is there time to stop all this
happening? Perhaps — but it will take a huge effort, a wartime
response when the world is being led by billionaires, ideologues and
their appeasers intent on denying reality. We’re sleepwalking to
disaster. By the time we wake up, it will be too late.
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