I challenge somebody, ANYBODY, in the New Zealand media to do an article like this one.
Arctic
Ocean edging towards ice-free for first time in millennia
20 per cent
chance 2015 will see ice-free Arctic Ocean in summer
28
January, 2015
A
group of scientists are flagging the possibility of a profound change
to the Arctic ecosystem this year — one that has not likely been
seen for 21,000 years, before the last ice age's deep chill took old.
The
Arctic Methane Emergency Group (AMEG) states there’s a 20 per cent
probability the Arctic Ocean will be ice-free during the summer of
2015. The probability of this occurring rises to 70 percent by 2020,
said Paul Beckwith, one of the group’s scientists.
Global
warming is being blamed.
“Within
about a decade the accelerated warming could keep the ocean ice-free
year round," said Beckwith, a paleoclimatogy professor at
the University of Ottawa.
"Then
we’re in a different type of [global] climate.”
At
first, this ice-free moment may only last for a week, he said, but
the seasonal thaw will last much longer as the planet continues to
warm.
The
2015 prediction for the north pole is not out of line with other
scientific forecasts. The U.S. Navy believes the Arctic could be ice
free as early as 2016.
Cambridge
University professor Peter Wadhams has long said it is a profound
shift in Arctic climate. The oceans physics scholar has studied sea
ice thickness on more than a dozen missions on British submarines.
“The
fall off in ice volume is so fast that it is going to bring us to
zero [ice in the Arctic Ocean] very quickly," he said in 2011.
For
millennia, the Arctic Ocean has been ruled by two frozen forces:
permanent, multi-year sea ice, and annual sea ice. The latter
expands and contracts each summer or winter from the permanent sea
ice core at the top of the planet.
All
manner of northern life, from Inuit people to polar bears, have
relied on this fundamental pattern of seasonal ice floes to survivŠ¾.
Methane emergency
Perhaps
even more troubling is what this warming trend will do for releasing
trapped methane — a greenhouse gas estimated to be 20 to 30 times
more potent than CO2 in trapping heat.
Below
the oceans, warming waters will cause gigatonnes of the gas to bubble
up from the sea floors, the scientists claim. Along the East
Siberian Arctic Shelf, there is an estimated 500 billion tonnes of
methane. Scientists have already witnessed the release of this gas
off the coast of Russia, as well as regions near Norway and Alaska.
Arctic scientists examining sea ice and melt ponds in the Chukchi Sea in high north. NASA photo.
Another
worry: melting permafrost. Canada's frozen northern frontier contains
organic matter in the rock and soil that decompose into methane.
It's trapped for now, but if released, it along with methane
from the sea could dwarf current atmospheric levels.
Uncontrollable global warming feared
The
fear is this could lead to “runaway global warming” said
Beckwith. Newly released methane warms the planet, in turn releasing
more methane. If this loop is triggered, Beckwith thinks it may not
be possible to stop planetary warming, even with human effort to curb
emissions.
“It’s
the most powerful feedback in the Arctic,” he dded.
NASA
recently declared 2014 as the hottest year on record, and scientists
at AMEG warn that global attempts to lower carbon emissions are too
little and too late.
The
scientists clarify that an ice-free Arctic still means ice chunks
will remain floating around, but the once inhospitable region will
become far more navigable to ships than ever before.
Oil
and gas companies see that as an opportunity. Shell Oil says the
Arctic contains "30 per cent of the world’s undiscovered
natural gas and 13 percent of its yet-to-find oil."
But
other scientists think the Arctic’s thaw will happen more slowly
than AMEGs suggests. One of Canada’s top Arctic sea-ice
researchers, David Barber, predicts an ice-free Arctic summer by
2050.
“I
am not aware of any catastrophic release of methane this coming
summer, and I am quite sure it is not predictable,” said Barber, a
Canada Research Chair in Arctic system science, in an e-mail from
Rome.
However,
Barber has said the northern sea ice has become “rotten” and more
susceptible to falling apart. On a recent journey to the
Arctic, he witnessed an ice flow the size of a city disintegrate in
mere minutes.
The
Arctic Methane Emergency Group presented its findings last month at
the UN Summit on Climate Change in Peru, where countries attempted to
reach a global deal on reducing emissions.
“We
have to phase out fossil fuels or we’re going to go places we don’t
want to go,” Beckwith said.
With
files from Mychaylo Prystupa
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