High methane readings over
Greenland
9
February, 2014
High
methane readings have been recorded over Greenland since the start of
February 2014. The image below shows methane readings of 1950 ppb and
higher in yellow on February 9, 2014.
The
animation below shows that high methane readings (1950+ ppb in
yellow)
have been showing up over Greenland since the start of
February 2014.
[
Note: this animation is a 3.28 MB file that may take some time to
fully load ]
|
What
could have caused these high methane readings? The persistence with
which the methane shows up over Greenland indicates that it did
indeed originate from Greenland.
The above animation also illustrates that high methane readings show up every other image. The IASI readings come from a satellite that is orbiting the poles twice daily, with a 12-hour interval, so the satellite passes the North Pole twice every day. This makes that the images follow a day-versus night pattern, indicating that the high methane readings follow a circadian rhythm, suggesting a pattern that is in line with temperature differences between day and night.
There often is a difference in methane readings between day and night, but rarely is it as distinct as is currently the case over Greenland. And indeed, more is currently happening to temperatures over Greenland than mere differences in temperature between day and night.
As discussed in earlier posts such as this one, the once-common temperature difference between the Arctic and lower latitudes has been shattered, and this is weakening the Jet Stream and the Polar Vortex, in turn making it easier for cold air to flow down to lower latitudes and for warmer air to enter the Arctic. As a result, temperature over Greenland can go from one extreme into another, as illustrated by the image with selected cci-reanalyzer.org forecasts below.
The above animation also illustrates that high methane readings show up every other image. The IASI readings come from a satellite that is orbiting the poles twice daily, with a 12-hour interval, so the satellite passes the North Pole twice every day. This makes that the images follow a day-versus night pattern, indicating that the high methane readings follow a circadian rhythm, suggesting a pattern that is in line with temperature differences between day and night.
There often is a difference in methane readings between day and night, but rarely is it as distinct as is currently the case over Greenland. And indeed, more is currently happening to temperatures over Greenland than mere differences in temperature between day and night.
As discussed in earlier posts such as this one, the once-common temperature difference between the Arctic and lower latitudes has been shattered, and this is weakening the Jet Stream and the Polar Vortex, in turn making it easier for cold air to flow down to lower latitudes and for warmer air to enter the Arctic. As a result, temperature over Greenland can go from one extreme into another, as illustrated by the image with selected cci-reanalyzer.org forecasts below.
[
click on image to enlarge ]
|
Above
image shows that, in some areas over Greenland, temperature anomalies
may go down as low as as minus 20 degrees Celsius one day, then climb
as high as 20 degrees Celsius a few days laters, to hit temperature
anomalies as low as minus 20 degrees Celsius again some days later.
These are swings of 40 degrees Celisus that can hit an area over the
course of a few days.
This
could explain the methane over Greenland. Methane is present in the
Greenland ice sheet in the form of hydrates and free gas. These huge
temperature swings are causing the ice to expand and contract, thus
causing difference in pressure as well as temperature. The combined
shock of wide pressure and temperature differences is causing
movement and fractures in the ice allowing methane to rise to the
surface and enter the atmosphere.
Similar
processes could be going on Antarctica, the Himalayas and the
Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. Methane release from hydrates and free gas
contained in the ice over mountains appears to have been ignored by
the IPCC, which puts more weight on my
estimate that
methane release from hydrates currently amounts to 99 Tg annually,
vastly more than the most recent IPCC estimates of 6 Tg per year.
Without
action on climate change, these methane releases threaten to rise
even further and cause runaway global warming. This calls for
comprehensive and effective action as discussed at the Climate
Plan blog.
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