CO2 emissions from melting permafrost

August 3, 2009 12:36 by Carbonica

The frozen soil under the tundra of West Siberia is home to millions of tonnes of CO2 and methane locked in the ice. Methane is a gas that has around 25 times as power a greenhouse effect as carbon dioxide. By 2005, the melting permafrost was releasing 100,000 tonnes of methane a day. These emissions contribute more to global warming than the US's net CO2 emissions.  

An article in The Economist's issue of this week describes how the tundra will be soon a closely studied ecosystem, owing to its impact on climate change. Its vast reserves of CO2 and methane will be a collosal driving force of global warming, known as a "feedback effect". As global warming takes its course, more permafrost melts, releasing hundreds of thousands of tonnes of methane and CO2 into the atmosphere and therefore causing a greater global temperature increase, and in turn a more accelerated melting of permafrost.

Permafrost is liquefying at an alarming rate and had never melted until now. The solid mix of peat and ice contains a difficult to estimate amount of CO2 and methane within an area of around a million square kilometers (approx the size of France and Germany combined) and a depth of hundreds of meters. The amounts of GHG gases contained are more than significant. However the alarming note is that none of these is taken into account in the [rather conservative] climate change predictions of the IPCC.

Brunella

www.carbonica.org

 

 


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August 4. 2009 05:17

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arthurfang

October 1. 2009 17:16

This is actually incorrect. I am a scientist studying permafrost melt and methane production in Alaska. There is no CO2 or methane "locked in ice" and little that is actually contained in permfrost. What you mean to say is that there are millions of tons of CARBON stored in permafrost. This carbon, when thawed, may be coverted by microbes (which use the carbon as food) to CO2 and methane, which are bioproducts of their growth and metabolism. I fully agree that this is an important issue, but we must be clear in communicating accurate science to the public!

Laura Brosius

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