Many thanks to Nick Breeze and also Natalia Shakhova and Igor Semiletov.
Subsea
permafrost on East Siberian Arctic Shelf in accelerated decline
Interview
by Nick Breeze with Dr Natalia Shakhova and Dr Igor Semiletov
24
June, 2017
A
new scientific paper published in Nature
Communication Journal demonstrates
that the mechanisms of destabilisation of subsea permafrost, contrary
to previous claims, provide new insights into increased emissions
from the worlds largest deposits of methane, that exists in the East
Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS).
The
subsea permafrost has for thousands of years acted as a seal,
restricting the flow of gas through the water column to the
atmosphere. This paper clearly shows that permafrost degradation and
the occurrence of gas migration pathways are key
factors in controlling the emissions.
Knowing
the rate of emission and mechanism of permafrost degradation is a
prerequisite to meaningful predictions of near-future methane
releases in the Arctic. In this interview with two of the leading
authors of this paper, Dr Natalia Shakhova and Dr Igor Semiletov, we
learn that the decay of the subsea permafrost, even that which was
submerged relatively recently (less than 1000 years ago) is currently
occurring and, due to manmade global warming, there is no known
countervailing force to stop the trend of further decay and increased
emissions.
What
is the East Siberian Arctic Shelf?
The
East Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS) is the largest and the shallowest
shelf in the worlds ocean with a mean depth of around 50m. The
total area of the ESAS is 2,000,000 sq Km’s with a seabed of frozen
organic matter called subsea permafrost. This coastal permafrost
(ground that remains less than or equal to 0ºC for 2 or more years)
developed when the northern hemisphere cooled around 2.5
million years ago.
As
the glaciers eventually melted, the sea-level rose submerging the
permafrost. Inundation of the shelf with seawater has changed the
permafrost properties due to an increase in temperature of as much as
17ºC.
Warming
of the ESAS began about 12-13 thousand years ago when the entire
shelf area was exposed above sea level. When the inundation occurred,
numerous thaw lakes underlain by taliks, existed on the surface of
the permafrost. A talik is a layer within the permafrost that is
above 0ºC.
It
is the behaviour of this permafrost that has occupied Dr Shakhova and
Dr Semiletov in their studies of the ESAS because beneath it is the
largest pool of methane gas predicted to exist in the world.
Gas
migration paths building in degrading permafrost acts like a
Champagne cork
Dr.
Shakhova: We
use an analogy where we compare the East Siberian Arctic Shelf to a
bottle of champagne. So the gas produces within this bottle and it
keeps accumulating as long as the cork serves as an impermeable lid.
This
lid is subsea permafrost. Before it was just permafrost [on land] but
after it was submerged it became subsea permafrost and served to
preserve an increasing amount of gas produced from its release to the
ocean and atmosphere above. While this lid is impermeable, there is
nothing to worry about.
But
when this lid loses its integrity, this is when we start worrying.
This is where the methane is releasing and the amounts of
methane currently releasing makes us think it will increase as a
result of the disintegration of this permafrost body.
Nick
Breeze: How can the changes observed more recently in a little over
three decade period be conclusive?
Dr.
Shakhova: For
the permafrost, three decades is not a huge period of time, because
the processes, the consequences of which we are studying right now
and have to deal with, started long long ago. This was triggered by
natural warming associated with replacement of the cold climate epoch
with the warm interglacial period and followed by permafrost
inundation by sea water. Scientists agree that submerged permafrost
would eventually start degrading, but how soon and at what pace this
degradation would occur became the major point of disagreement
between them.
It
was suggested by some scientists that subsea permafrost would keep
its integrity for millennia, which means that in the areas submerged
less than 1000 years ago (as we investigated in our study) it should
not have occurred yet. Our study proved that not only has it ;already
occurred, but it has been progressing to higher rates, which have
almost doubled since this degradation started.
It
is most likely that we are now dealing with the consequences of when
natural warming is enhanced with anthropogenic warming and together
they are accelerating the pace of natural processes. This appears to
be continuing the processes of permafrost degradation at levels that
we have never observed before.
Shakhova
explains that during the period between ice ages, called
an interglacial period, the permafrost starts to
thin due to the warming. It has been pointed out that in previous
interglacials, the temperatures were even higher than they are now
but the methane hydrates were not released from the ESAS.
Dr.
Shakhova: Despite
the fact that in the Eamian (the interglacial period that occurred
130,000 - 115,000 years ago) the temperatures reached higher numbers
but the duration of
this optimum period was shorter (about 2 thousand years) and was
followed by cooling; in the Holocene, there is still no cooling after
more than 5 thousand years of warming.
For
subsea permafrost, it was long thought that because the duration of
warming is more important than surface temperatures themselves, in
order to start thawing, it must first reach an equilibrium with the
surrounding environment. For that reason, it only matters that the
temperature of the surrounding environment reaches the level at which
permafrost thaws; after that, it makes no difference if the
temperature reaches +5ºC, or +7ºC; once thawed, it is no longer
permafrost. We also demonstrated in our latest paper, that there are
more intricate mechanisms of permafrost disintegration, not known
before, that allow gas migration pathways to form well before the
whole permafrost body is thawed through.
What
is important is that it is above the thaw point and how
long this warming lasted. This is what effects the
permafrost more effectively than the temperature itself.
So
the thinning can only continue if the duration of the warmer period
is long enough to cause the taliks that lead to gas migration
pathways that allow for the passage of methane from the sediments
below.
Dr.
Shakhova: As
we showed in our articles, in the ESAS, in some places, subsea
permafrost is reaching the thaw point. In other areas it could have
reached this point already. And what can happen then? The most
important consequence could be in terms of growing methane emissions…
a linear trend becomes exponential.
This
edge between it being linear and becoming exponential is very fine
and lays between frozen and thawed states of subsea permafrost. This
is what we call the turning point. To me, I cannot
take the responsibility in saying there is a right point between the
linear and exponential yet, but following the logic of our
investigation and all the evidence that we accumulated so far, it
makes me think that we are very near this point. And in this
particular point, each year matters.
This
is the big difference between being on the linear trend where
hundreds and thousands of years matter, and being on the
exponential where each year matters.
Shakhova
and Semiletov currently estimate that of the 2,000,000 sq km’s that
comprise the ESAS, 200,000 sq km’s (10%) are what they would
call hotspots, areas where methane emissions are
observed as being far greater than in the lowerbackground area.
Nick
Breeze: Does a sudden burst of methane become feasible as the subsea
permafrost is destabilised?
Dr.
Shakhova: The
difference between emissions in background areas and hotspots is
orders of magnitude.
It’s
about… try the difference between about 3 milligrams per square
metre per day [for background areas] or 3,000 grammes per square
metre per day. How many orders [of magnitude]? It’s 3-5
orders of magnitude between this.
This
is exactly what is the difference between the linear and exponential.
If the areas we call hotspots increase about two
times there would be huge difference in the scale of emissions. Three
times, there would be even bigger difference. If there could be an
outburst like a gigatonne release, I don’t know if I can exclude
this scenario, and what would be the argument to exclude this
scenario?
Because
when we see the difference between two different areas releasing
methane at rates divided by 5 orders of magnitude (like 3 milligrams
and 3 kilograms), that indicates to me that up on progression of
permafrost degradation, the area of gas migration pathways will grow
and the area of hotspots will grow accordingly.
Gas
in the areas of hotspots is releasing from the seabed deposits, in
which free gas has accumulated for hundreds of thousands, or even for
a million years. This is why the amount of this gas and its power in
releasing (due to its high pressure) is tremendous.
That
would allow large releases of methane and whatever you call it -
outburst, bomb, or whatever, I see no point to say no to such a
possibility. I’m afraid to say yes because we still have to learn
so much about the mechanism.
Nick
Breeze: In relation to the ESAS, how do you know these hydrates
are there and that they are a potential threat?
Dr.
Shakhova: The importance
of hydrates involvement in methane emissions is overestimated. The
hydrate is just one form of possible reservoirs, in which pre-formed
methane could be preserved in the seabed if there are proper
pressure/temperature conditions; it is just the layer of hydrates
composes just few hundred of meters – this is a very small fraction
compared to thousands of meters of underlying gas-charged sediments
in the ESAS.
Dr.
Semiletov added that the 5 billion tonnes of methane that is
currently in the Earth’s atmosphere represents about one percent of
the frozen methane hydrate store in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf.
He finishes emphasising “…but we believe the hydrate pool
is only a tiny fraction of the total.”
Dr.
Shakhova: The
second point is that the hydrates are not all of the gaseous pool
that is preserved in this huge reservoir. This huge area is 2 million
square kilometres. The depth of this sedimentary drape is a few
kilometres, up to 20 kilometres at places. Generally speaking, it
makes no difference if gas releases from decaying hydrates or from
other free-gas deposits, because in the latter, gas also has
accumulated for a long time without changing the volume of the
reservoir; for that reason, gas became over pressurised too.
Unlike
hydrates, this gas is preserved free; it is a pre-formed gas, ready
to go. Over pressured, accumulated, looking for the pathway to go
upwards.
The
point Shakhova and Semiletov are making is that the question of
whether there are methane hydrates present beneath the permafrost is
really not important. The estimated amount of hydrates, 1500 billion
tonnes, is actually only a tiny proportion of the actual pressurised
methane store beneath the gas hydrate stability zone.
Dr.
Shakhova: The
third point is that the hydrates, despite disbelief from some
scientists, have already been found in the ESAS. We know from
personal communication that the South Korean expedition was
accomplished in 2016 and they sampled the hydrates. I believe, this
data will be published soon. However, hydrates could only be sampled
if they remain stable. After hydrates are destabilised, we can only
sample gas releasing from these decaying deposits.
In
our observations, we have accumulated the evidence that this gas
front is propagating in the sediments. To me as a scientist, these
points are enough to be convinced that methane release in the ESAS is
related to disintegration of subsea permafrost and associated
destabilisation of seabed deposits whether it is hydrates or free gas
accumulations.
Principal
diagram showing formation of different types of hydrate deposits in
permafrost-bearing environment and their interaction with seawater in
the East Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS):
Nick
Breeze: Why do some scientists say there can be no hydrates in the
ESAS?
Natalia
Shakhova: They
believe the required pressure could only be built by the overlaying
water column, creating so called hydrostatic pressure. With a mean
depth of water column in the ESAS of about 50 meters, these
scientists think the hydrostatic pressure would not be enough and,
thus, hydrates would not form. This is a misunderstanding, because
this argument only works if the seafloor is considered the top
boundary of the hydrates stability zone (HSZ).
In
areas of permafrost, there are a few specific features altering the
pressure/temperature conditions required for the formation of
hydrates:
1)
Because hydrates are associated with permafrost, their top boundary
could be well below the sea floor, closer to the bottom of
permafrost. It is natural that grounds composing seabed could build
up pressure even more efficiently than the water column. This is
because grounds are denser, thus, to create 1 atmosphere of pressure
it only requires 5-8 meters compared to 10 meters of water column.
This
means that the top boundary of the HSZ would occur tens to hundreds
meters below the seafloor.
2)
High inter-pore pressure could also form during sediment freezing of
shelf sediments while shelf exposure above the sea level in cold
epochs, which means that the upper boundary of the gas hydrate
stability zone could occur at shallower depths (less than 100
metres).
3)
Because a major fraction of hydrates form when the shelf is dry, very
low temperatures occurring in the grounds are pared with lower
pressure requirements than it is for oceanic hydrates. It is unclear
to me why scientists ignore these facts while arguing the presence of
hydrates in the ESAS.
The
claim that there is not enough water depth for hydrates has
absolutely no scientific reasoning.
However,
all the opposite opinions are based exclusively on modelling results,
which, until now, are based on lack of knowledge of subsea permafrost
physics, as well as a lack of observational data to calibrate the
models.
Nick
Breeze: Could the 10% area of hotspots in the ESAS be very
significant in releasing methane and impacting the global climate?
Dr.
Shakhova: The
area of hotspots is determined by the fraction of subsea permafrost
that is disintegrated. The process of permafrost degradation started
thousands of years ago and it is now a key driver triggering methane
emissions from these long-preserved deposits.
Emissions
that are occurring right now are the result of a combined effect of
natural and anthropogenic warming and they will be accelerated
until warming is turned to cooling. Even after it happens, there is
no mechanism to stop permafrost disintegration in the ESAS besides
shelf exposure above the sea level that would serve to freeze the gas
migration paths so that they integrate with the permafrost. Before
that, the amount of methane that is releasing will increase while the
supply lasts.
As
gas within the sedimentary basins of the ESAS have been accumulating
for a million years with no way to be released earlier, the supply
for currently occurring emissions is tremendous. Because the shelf
area is very shallow (mean depth is less than 50 metres), a fraction
of these emissions will reach the atmosphere. The problem is that
this fraction would be enough to alter the climate on our planet
drastically.
Dr
Semiletov and Dr Shakhova are coauthors of a new paper published in
Nature Communications Journal titled: ‘Current rates and mechanisms
of subsea permafrost degradation in the East Siberian Shelf’ and
are about to begin new work to accurately assess the quantity of
carbon preserved in the sedimentary drape of the East Siberian Arctic
Shelf.
Interview conducted in April 2017 by Nick Breeze (@NickGBReeze)
Interview conducted in April 2017 by Nick Breeze (@NickGBReeze)
From
May, 2017
The
East Siberian Arctic Shelf has received more attention in recent
years in regards to a potential contribution of the greenhouse gas
methane, for the global methane budget, from several different
sources. However, more studies are required to better constrain this
potential accelerator of ongoing climate change.
Natalia Shakhova (2014), via Max Wilbert https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHziS...
Natalia Shakhova (2010), .. methane stores destabilizing, venting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eD8hU...
Study: The origin of methane in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf unraveled (2017) http://www.biogeosciences.net/14/2283...
Review: The interaction of climate change and methane hydrates (2017) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10... andhttps://www.usgs.gov/news/gas-hydrate...
Rune Pettersen, burn under ice methane in the dark https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooAbo...
Methane seep from lake (2012) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OANRd...
New Source Of Methane Discovered In The Arctic Ocean https://cage.uit.no/news/new-source-m...
Figure of 300 GTn of fossil fuel emissions via An Arctic methane worst-case scenario http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/...
Image 800,000 years of methane (EPA) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Images Methane bubbles collect under the ice (Natalia Shakhova) https://news.uaf.edu/ESAS2013
Underwater bubble sounds https://www.freesound.org/people/Sclo...
Water bubble video clip https://pixabay.com/en/videos/bubbles...
Sound effects via http://Soundmorph.com and http://EpicStockMedia.com
Related: Ocean Waters Above Methane Seeps Absorb Large Amounts Of Co2 https://cage.uit.no/news/ocean-waters...
Blooming Algae Could Accelerate Arctic Warming http://www.climatecentral.org/news/al...
Natalia Shakhova (2014), via Max Wilbert https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHziS...
Natalia Shakhova (2010), .. methane stores destabilizing, venting https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eD8hU...
Study: The origin of methane in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf unraveled (2017) http://www.biogeosciences.net/14/2283...
Review: The interaction of climate change and methane hydrates (2017) http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10... andhttps://www.usgs.gov/news/gas-hydrate...
Rune Pettersen, burn under ice methane in the dark https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooAbo...
Methane seep from lake (2012) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OANRd...
New Source Of Methane Discovered In The Arctic Ocean https://cage.uit.no/news/new-source-m...
Figure of 300 GTn of fossil fuel emissions via An Arctic methane worst-case scenario http://www.realclimate.org/index.php/...
Image 800,000 years of methane (EPA) https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Images Methane bubbles collect under the ice (Natalia Shakhova) https://news.uaf.edu/ESAS2013
Underwater bubble sounds https://www.freesound.org/people/Sclo...
Water bubble video clip https://pixabay.com/en/videos/bubbles...
Sound effects via http://Soundmorph.com and http://EpicStockMedia.com
Related: Ocean Waters Above Methane Seeps Absorb Large Amounts Of Co2 https://cage.uit.no/news/ocean-waters...
Blooming Algae Could Accelerate Arctic Warming http://www.climatecentral.org/news/al...
Some of this picture presented is over 7 years old.
ReplyDeleteMethane release does appear to be accelerating dramatically but this is not taken into account in the last IPCC report.
It is not clear in this article how much of what is written has been selected by the author from an interview.
I would regard the article as interesting but no substitute of a full scientific peer reviewed paper. The Russians have done a lot of work in monitoring methane streams.
Robin, would you please give me the source of the image under "Principal diagram showing formation of different types of hydrate deposits ..."
ReplyDeleteIt's not in the original article.