The
Arctic is thawing much faster than expected, scientists warn
NEWTOK, AK – JULY 06: The marshy, tundra landscape surrounding Newtok is seen from a plane on July 6, 2015 outside Newtok, Alaska. (Photo by Andrew Burton/Getty Images)
WashingtonPost,
23 March, 2016
This
story has been updated.
Amid blowout
warm temperatures in
the Arctic this year, two new studies have
amplified concerns about one of the wild cards of a warming planet —
how quickly warming Arctic soils could become major contributors
of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere, causing still greater warming.
In
a major
international study published
last week in Nature Geoscience, a team of researchers from regions
ranging from Alaska to Russia report that permafrost is thawing
faster than expected — even in some of the very coldest areas.
In
these regions, winter freezing cracks open the ground, which
then fills with water in the summer from melting snow. When
refreezing occurs in the winter, that causes large wedges of ice to
form amid the icy ground. These ice wedges can extend ten or fifteen
meters deep, and can in some cases be thousands of years old.
But
the study, sampling high Arctic sites in Russia, Alaska, and Canada
based on both field studies and satellite observations, found that
across the Arctic, the tops of these wedges are melting, as the top
layer of permafrost soil — which itself lies beneath a so-called
“active layer” of soil that freezes and thaws regularly — also
begins to thaw. “Landscape-wide ice-wedge degradation was observed
at ten out of eleven sites,” the paper reported.
“At
the places where we have sufficient amounts of data we are seeing
this process happen in less than a decade and even after one warm
summer,” says Anna Liljedahl, the lead author of the study and a
researcher at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks.
“The
scientific community has had the assumption that this cold permafrost
would be protected from climate warming, but we’re showing here
that the top of the permafrost, even if it’s very cold, is very
sensitive to these warming events,” Liljedahl continues.
The
new study focuses specifically on the consequences of this ice wedge
degradation for the region’s hydrology. The melting of ice wedges
redistributes water on a massive scale. It can flow out of the
landscape and into rivers and the Arctic Ocean, says Liledahl. Or it
pools in lakes.
However,
the real implication is far broader, says Liledahl’s co-author Ken
Tape, also a professor at the University of Alaska-Fairbanks. “It’s
the first study where these features and changes have been documented
across the Arctic,” Tape says. “We’ve had occasional studies
where they look at one place. That’s a lot different than saying
it’s happening across the Arctic.”
“It’s
a region that we thought up until recently would hold together a
little bit better because there’s so much cold permafrost, and so
much cold down deep,” Tape continues. “I think the idea was that
it will be more stable than this.”
The
degrading of permafrost in this way won’t just affect water, but
also the planet’s atmosphere, says another of Liljedahl’s
co-authors, the permafrost expert Vladimir Romanovsky, also of the
University of Alaska-Fairbanks. “The degradation of ice wedges
shows that upper part of permafrost is thawing, and thawing of the
upper part of permafrost definitely is producing additional
greenhouse gases,” he says.
The
problem is that as these frozen soils thaw, even for part of the
year, microorganisms living within them can begin to break down dead
but preserved plant life from eons past, and release their carbon in
the form of carbon dioxide or methane. Romanovsky says he thinks
that the Earth’s atmosphere already contains more greenhouse gases
than it might otherwise due to this thawing.
It
has been estimated that Arctic permafrost contains roughly
twice as
much total carbon in its frozen depths as the entire planetary
atmosphere does, because these landscapes have slowly stored it up
over vast time periods.
And
it’s not just carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that results — the
melting of ice wedges leads to sinking ground and a bumpy, denatured
landscape that impairs Arctic transportation and infrastructure.
“Instead of having a relatively smooth landscape, which is really
easy to drive a snowmachine on, you create this bumpy landscape, with
bumps that could become a meter or two high,” says Liljedahl.
There
have been at least some arguments that there may be other factors
that offset permafrost carbon emissions. Some have suggested, for
instance, that more plants will grow in the warmer Arctic,
sequestering more carbon, and that this will help offset permafrost
losses.
But
in the second
study,
just published in Environmental Research Letters, an expert
assessment of nearly 100 Arctic scientists found little reason to
believe there will be any factor that offsets permafrost emissions
enough to reduce the level of worry.
The
expert assessment led to the conclusion that, as the paper puts it,
“Arctic and boreal biomass should not be counted on to offset
permafrost carbon release and suggests that the permafrost region
will become a carbon source to the atmosphere by 2100 regardless of
warming scenario.”
These
studies of permafrost are critical because of the underlying math of
the climate change problem. There is a hard limit to how many
greenhouse gases can be emitted if we want to avoid a given level of
warming — say, 1.5 degrees Celsius or 2 degrees Celsius above
pre-industrial levels.
Researchers
have even quantified the latter limit, suggesting we can’t emit
more than 1,000 billion tons, or gigatons, of carbon dioxide from
2011 and on if we want a two thirds or better chance of staying below
2 degrees C. The inevitable result is an extremely tight planetary
carbon budget for the coming years.
Permafrost
has the potential to upend all of that. The last thing the world
needs, as it creaks into action to reduce emissions, is the emergence
of a major new source of them, brought on by warming itself. Yet
that’s exactly what we’re talking about here.
Granted,
precisely how much carbon permafrost can emit and how fast that can
happen remain big uncertainties. But given current scientific
understanding, it
could easily be well over 100 gigatons of carbon dioxide by the end
of the century, or one tenth of the remaining carbon budget. In fact,
it could be more than that.
“Ten
percent is really something that you have to be aware and include it
in any kind of projections of changes in greenhouse gases,” said
Romanovsky. “And I would say at this point it is still slow, but
with further warming, probably by mid-century, these emissions will
be much more.”
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