Russian scientists deny climate model of IPCC
Massive
emissions of methane in the Arctic become a significant source of
greenhouse gases, a study reveals
TOMSK
POLYTECHNIC UNIVERSITY
15
August, 2017
The
rate of vertical degradation of subsea permafrost in the East
Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS) is 18 cm a year over the past 30 years,
which is greater than previously thought. Scientists from Tomsk
Polytechnic University received this data after the comprehensive
study of subsea permafrost not only in the Russian Arctic but also in
the Arctic as a whole.
TPU
scientists and co-authors from Russia and Sweden have recently
published findings of the study in Nature
Communications.
Earlier
it was believed that the bulk of subsea permafrost in the ESAS is
continuous that eliminates the destabilization of a giant pool of
lower-laying methane hydrates. According to the model estimates of
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), until the end
of the 21st century the degradation of permafrost in the ESAS cannot
exceed several meters and the formation of through taliks will take
hundreds or thousands of years that eliminates the opportunity of
massive methane (CH4) emissions from the bottom sediments of the ESAS
into water column - atmosphere system due to the destruction of
hydrates. Thus the IPCC considers the potential contribution of the
ESAS into the emissions of CH4 as insignificant. The paper shows that
the model is not really correct.
Basing
on the repeated drilling of four wells performed by the Institute of
Permafrost Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences in
1982-1983, scientists have proved that the rates of vertical
degradation of subsea permafrost amount to18 cm a year over the last
30 years (the average is 14 cm a year) which is greater than it was
assumed before.
'New
data obtained by complex biochemical, geophysical and geological
studies conducted in 2011-2016 resulted in the conclusion that in
some areas of the East Siberian Arctic Shelf the roof of the subsea
permafrost had already reached the depth of hydrates' stability the
destruction of which may cause massive releases of bubble methane.
According to our findings published earlier in Nature Geoscience,
Science and Philosophical Transactions, Royal Society, the size of
CH4 bubble flaw from the bottom sediments into the ESAS water can
vary from milligrams to tens or hundreds of grams per square meter a
day depending on the state of subsea permafrost, which leads to the
concentration increase of atmospheric CH4 in the surface layer to
values 2-4 times exceeding background concentrations measured in our
planet,' says the first author of the paper Professor Natalia
Shakhova, the TPU Department of Geology and Minerals Prospecting.
She
notes that these findings were confirmed during the expedition to the
East Siberian Arctic Self in 2016. The expedition was organized and
conducted jointly with the scientists from the Pacific Oceanological
Institute FEB RAS, with the participation of the Institute of
Oceanology RAS and the Institute of Atmospheric Physics RAS. More
data will be published in 2018.
'The
results of our study ensure fundamentally new insights of the
mechanism of processes responsible for the state of subsea permafrost
in the East Siberian Arctic Shelf which, according to various
estimates, concentrates up to 80% and more of entire subsea
permafrost in the Northern Hemisphere, under which there are huge
hydrocarbon reserves in the forms of hydrates, oil and free gas.
Besides,
based on this data approaches to studying of subsea permafrost and
its mathematical simulation will be revised and changed. This is
critical for the reduction of geo-risks arising during the
exploration and industrial drilling. However, there are still many
unresolved issues which our research team will deal with,' says
Associate Member of Russian Academy of Sciences Igor Semiletov, Head
of Arctic Seas Carbon Research International Lab, TPU.
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