Peak Methane Spike to 2845 Parts Per Billion on April 25, 2015 is Just Uncanny
28
April, 2015
If
you look at the annual methane fluctuations in the Arctic — the
region where peak global values tend to crop up — highest readings
typically occur during the September-through-October time-frame and
then again in January.
Over
the past few years, peak values have ranged as high as 2600 parts per
billion during the fall of 2014 and then again during January of
2015. Typically, peak values then subside as Northern Hemisphere
Winter locks in most of the emitting High Latitude sources and we
wait for the Autumn and early Winter overburdens to again emerge. So
those of us who keep track of methane kinda just sat tight, expecting
at least a somewhat calm spring, and waited for the new peak values
that would be most likely to pop up by late this year and early next.
But
then, on Saturday, this popped up in the NOAA METOP measure:
(NOAA
METOP methane measure finds peak values as high as 2845 parts per
billion. An extraordinarily high reading, especially for April. Image
source: NOAA
OPSO.)
A
whopping peak value of 2845 parts per billion at the 14,000 foot
level of the atmosphere where methane concentrations tend to top out
— especially in higher level clouds that have tended to be
associated with Arctic wildfires. A value more than 200 parts per
billion higher than daily peaks during January of 2015. All-in-all, a
huge and unexpected jump at a very odd time for it.
If
we look at the above map we find that most of the peak values are in
the region of Russia. With many peak values in areas where major
wildfires have been ongoing (Lake Baikal region, Khakassia), where
wildfires were just starting to flare up (Northern Ukraine), or above
other recently thawing permafrost zones. We also find decent spikes
over China, Europe, Iceland, spots of the High Arctic, Canada and
Alaska, Central Africa, The Indian Ocean, and over Antarctica.
Daily
Mean Values Pop as Well
Sam
Carana over at Arctic News caught
the spike earlier this week and provided this very informative graph
cataloging 14,000 to 18,000 foot methane levels for 2015:
(Daily
mean and peak values provided by Sam Carana show how much of an
outlier the April 25 spike is. Image source: Arctic
News.)
And
what we find, from looking at the graph, is that not only did peak
values spike to an extraordinary high level in late April, but mean
values also took a big jump — rising from 1807 ppb on January 10 to
a peak of 1829 ppb on April 22nd. A 12 parts per billion bump in the
entire global measure over a four month period (average annual rates
of increase have been in the range of 7 parts per billion each year
recently). A raging pace of increase 5 times faster than the annual
trend.
It’s
worth noting that daily peak and mean values do tend to swing back
and forth quite vigorously. As an example, a peak mean value of 1839
ppb was recorded on September 7 of 2014. But, as noted above, these
are extraordinarily abnormal high values for April. A quite
unsettling methane spike at a very odd time of year and happening on
dates and over locations that may suggest permafrost zone fire
involvement.
Conditions
in Context
For
context, methane is an extraordinarily powerful greenhouse gas with a
global warming potential about 30-40 times that of CO2 over
meaningful timescales. Global atmospheric averages for methane have
jumped from around 725 parts per billion during the 18th Century to
above 1820 parts per billion now. A major scientific controversy is
now ongoing over the issue of how rapidly global carbon stores will
respond to an extraordinary pace of human warming — with some
observational specialists raising the possibility of a very large
methane contribution from now activating carbon stores in the Arctic.
Links:
Recent new estimates for methane V CO2 is now 1000. Appears the ability to reduce CH4 to CO2 has been overwhelmed by the increasing ongoing emissions.
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