The
'Ticking Time Bomb' That Could Cause Such Rapid Global Warming We'd
Be Unable to Prevent Extinction
Our
planet has experienced five major extinctions over the past billion
or so years -- do we really want to launch an irreversible 6th?
Thom
Hartmann
26 November, 2013
If,
250 million years ago, you were standing thousands of miles away from
what is now Siberia in the first years of the Permian Mass Extension,
probably the most you would notice is an odd change in the weather
and a reddish hue in the northern sky. What you wouldn’t know, and
probably your children wouldn’t even realize –although their
grandchildren probably would – is that a tipping point had already
been passed, and an extinction – an unstoppable one – was already
underway.
Extinction?
What
could get America’s leading experts on climate change to agree on
something that the average American has probably never even heard of?
Methane.
Methane
is a far more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide, and there
are trillions of tons of it embedded in a sort of ice slurry called
methane hydrate or methane clathrate crystals in the Arctic and in
the seas around continental shelves from North America to Antarctica.
If
enough of this methane is released quickly enough, it won’t just
produce “Global warming.” It could produce an extinction of
species on a wide scale – an extinction that could even include the
human race.
If
there is a “ticking time bomb” in our biosphere that could lead
to a global warming so rapid and sudden that we would have no way of
dealing with it, it’s methane.
Our
planet has experienced five major extinctions over the past billion
or so years, times when more than half of all life has died in a
geologically brief period of time, and the common denominator of each
one has been a sudden pulse of global warming. Increasingly, it
appears that a rapid release of methane played a primary role in each
one.
Back
in 2002, the
BBC documented how,
just in the previous decade, geologists had by-and-large come to the
conclusion that a sudden release of methane led to the death of over
95% of everything on Earth during the Permian Mass Extinction. That
methane is back, probably in even larger quantities, as life has been
so active since the last mass extinction.
We
laid out the scenario and its possible doomsday implications in a
short video titled “ Last
Hours” a
few months ago. Since the world has been recently sensitized about
methane, we’re now discovering more and more of it leaking from oil
wells, fracking
operations,
melting permafrost, and even
stirred up by Arctic storms.
Just
this week, the EPA reported they may have been underestimating
by half the
amount of methane being produced by human activity. Meanwhile,
the National Science Foundation just released a report that methane
releases from the Arctic have also
been underestimated.
The caption accompanying their graphic says it all too clearly:
“Methane is leaking from the East Siberian Arctic Shelf into the
atmosphere at an alarming rate.”
While
methane does eventually degrade into carbon dioxide, when large
amounts are released over a short time period, their effect on global
warming can be dramatic, since methane is such a more potent
greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.
Carbon
dioxide in our atmosphere has passed 400 ppm, a number never before
seen in human history, but we’ve also never seen methane releases
on this order in human history. And, to a large extent, the naturally
occurring methane releases are the result of that 400 ppm of carbon
dioxide.
While
many of the methane releases are the result of fossil fuel extraction
processes, the most dangerous ones – the ones that could lead to
trillions of tons of methane escaping into the atmosphere and driving
an extinction event – are from the melting of frozen methane
clathrate crystals along the seabeds. And the process that drives
that is global warming, principally driven by carbon dioxide.
If
we want to avoid an extinction that could approach or even rival some
of the five past extinctions that have wiped out so much of life on
earth, we must get control, quickly, of our man-made carbon dioxide
and methane releases
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