High Velocity Human Warming Coaxes Arctic Methane Monster’s Rapid Rise From Fens
8
May, 2014
Fens.
A word that brings with it the mystic imagery of witch lights,
Beowulfian countrysides, trolls, swamp gas, dragons. A sight of
crumbling towers overlooking black waters. Now, it’s a word we can
add to our already long list of amplifying Arctic feedbacks to
human-caused warming. For the rapid formation of Arctic fens over the
past decade has now been linked in
a recent scientific study,
at least in part, to a return to atmospheric methane increases since
2007.
The
Role of Methane in Past Climate Change
Over
the past 800,000 years, ice core records show atmospheric methane
levels fluctuating between about 800 parts per billion during warm
interglacial periods and about 400 parts per billion during the cold
ice age periods. These fluctuations, in addition to atmospheric CO2
flux between 180 and 280 parts per million value were due to Earth
Systems feedbacks driven by periods of increased solar heat forcing
in the northern hemisphere polar region and back-swings due to
periods of reduced solar heat forcing.
Apparently,
added solar forcing at the poles during periodic changes in Earth’s
orbit (called Milankovitch Cycles) resulted in a flood of greenhouse
gasses from previously frozen lands and seas. This new flood
amplified the small heat forcing applied by orbital changes to
eventually break Earth out of cold ice age periods and push it back
into warm interglacials.
Compared
to current human warming, the pace of change at the time was slow,
driving 4-6 degrees Celsius of global atmospheric heating over
periods of around 8 to 20 thousand years. A small added amount of
solar heat gradually leached out a significant volume of heat
trapping gasses which, over the course of many centuries, undid the
great grip of ice on our world.
(Ice
core record of greenhouse gas flux over the last 650,000 years.
Methane flux is shown in the blue line that is second from the
bottom. It is worth noting that current atmospheric methane values
according to measures from the Mauna Loa Observatory are now in
excess of 1840 parts per billion value. Temperature change is
indicated in the lowest portion of the graph in the form of proxy
measurements of atmospheric deuterium which provide a good
correlation with surface temperature values. The gray shaded areas
indicate the last 5 interglacial periods. Temperature year 0 is 1950.
GHG year zero is 2006 in this graph. Image source: IPCC.)
By
comparison, under business as usual human fossil fuel emissions
combined with amplifying feedbacks from the Earth climate system
(such as those seen in the fens now forming over thawing Arctic
tundra), total warming could spike to an extraordinarily damaging
level between 5 and 9 degrees Celsius just by the end of this
century.
Methane
— Comparatively Small Volume = Powerful Feedback
A
combination of observation of past climates and tracking the ongoing
alterations to our own world driven by human greenhouse gas emissions
has given us an ever-clearer picture of how past climates might have
changed. As Earth warmed, tundra thawed and ice sheets retreated
releasing both CO2 and methane as ancient organic carbon stores,
trapped in ice for thousands to millions of years, were partly
liberated from the ice. In addition, warming seas likely liberated a
portion of the sea bed methane store even as warming brought on a
generally more active carbon cycle from the wider biosphere.
Overall,
the added heat feedback from the increases in atmospheric methane to
due these processes was about 50% that of the overall CO2 feedback,
even though the volume of methane was about 200 times less. This
disproportionately large share of heat forcing by volume is due to
the fact that methane is about 80 times more efficient at trapping
heat than CO2 over the course of 20 years.
A
Problem of High Velocity Thaw
In
the foreground of this comparatively rosy picture of gradual climate
change driven by small changes in solar heat forcing setting off
relatively more powerful amplifying greenhouse gas feedbacks, we run
into a number of rather difficult problems.
The
first is that the rate at which humans are adding greenhouse gasses
to the atmosphere as an initial heat forcing is unprecedented in the
geological record. Even the great tar basalts of the end Permian
Extinction were no equal to the rate at which humans are now adding
heat trapping gasses to the atmosphere. In just a short time, from
1880 to now, we’ve increased atmospheric CO2 by 120 parts per
million to around 400 ppm and atmospheric methane by more than 1100
parts per billion to around 1840 parts per billion. The result is an
atmospheric heat forcing not seen in at least the past 3 million
years and possibly as far back as 10 million years (due to the
radical increase in methane and other non CO2 heat trapping gasses).
This
extraordinary pace of heat trapping gas increase has led to a very
rapid pace of global atmospheric temperature increase of about .15
degrees Celsius per decade or about 30 times that of the end of the
last ice age. As atmospheric heat increases are amplified at the
poles and, in particular in the northern polar region, the areas with
the greatest stores of previously frozen carbon are the ones seeing
the fastest pace of warming. Siberia, for example, is warming at the
rate of .4 C per decade. Overall, the Arctic has warmed by about 3
degrees Celsius since 1880 or nearly 4 times the pace of overall
global warming.
(Pace
of Arctic warming since 1880 in degrees Fahrenheit based on reports
from 137 Arctic observation stations over the period. Image
source: Tamino.
Data source: NOAA’s
Global Historical Climatology Network.)
The
result is that, over the past two decades, the Arctic has been
warming at the pace of about .6 C (1 F)every ten years. And what we
are seeing in conjunction with very rapid warming is an extraordinary
high-velocity thaw. A thaw that is rapidly liberating stored organic
carbon locked in tundra at a rate that may well have no rational
geological corollary.
The
Arctic Methane Monster and a Multiplication of Fens
So
it is in this rather stark set of contexts that a study released in
early May examining
71 wetlands around the globe found rapidly melting permafrost was
resulting in the formation of an immense number of fens along the
permafrost thaw boundary zone. Tundra melt in lowlands became both
sources and traps for water. Such traps gained added water as
atmospheric temperature increases held greater levels of humidity
resulting in increased heavy rainfall events such as thunderstorms.
These newly thawed and flooded fens, the study found, were emitting
unexpectedly high volumes of methane gas.
From
the methane standpoint, fens are a problem due to the fact that they
are constantly wet. Whereas bogs may be wet, then dry, fens remain
wet year-round. And since bacteria that break down the recently
thawed organic carbon stores into methane thrive in a constantly wet
environment the fens were found to be veritable methane factories. A
powerful amplifying feedback loop that threatens to liberate a
substantial portion of the approximately 1,500 gigatons of carbon
stored in now melting tundra as the powerful heat trapper that is
methane.
(Mauna
Loa methane levels 1985 to 2014. A return to rising atmospheric
levels post 2007 is, in part, attributed to rapid tundra thaw and the
formation of methane producing fens. Other significant new methane
sources likely include sea bed methane from Arctic stores and rising
human methane emissions due to expanding coal use and hydraulic
fracturing. Image source: NOAA
ESRL.)
By
comparison, drier environments would result in the release of stored
carbon as CO2, which would still provide a strong heat feedback, but
no-where near as powerful as the rapid environmental forcing from a
substantial methane release.
Lead
study author Merritt Turetsky noted:
“Methane emissions are one example of a positive feedback between ecosystems and the climate system. The permafrost carbon feedback is one of the important and likely consequences of climate change, and it is certain to trigger additional warming. Even if we ceased all human emissions, permafrost would continue to thaw and release carbon into the atmosphere. Instead of reducing emissions, we currently are on track with the most dire scenario considered by the IPCC. There is no way to capture emissions from thawing permafrost as this carbon is released from soils across large regions of land in very remote spaces.”
Links:
Reposting:
The
methane time bomb
Premier
arctic scientist Natalia Shakhova tells us that the arctic methane
time bomb is real & could very well accelerate with a vengeance.
Natalia
delivered this speech in December 2012 in Vienna – strong
confirmation of the predictive power of her research.
She
openly says that the methane time bomb is an increasingly probable
event.
She
& her husband, Igor Semiletov, are the most knowledgeable
scientists about arctic methane.
Their
experimental field work & gathered empirical data are foremost.
Any
observer can see the sadness & despair in her face, voice, &
manner; especially during the last minute.
Natalia
does not know how to lie.
Her
video here may be the most momentous prediction in human history
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