This is not good news.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/05/science/earth/05methane.html

Jon

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March 4, 2010
Study Says Undersea Release of Methane Is Under Way
By CORNELIA DEAN

Climate scientists have long warned that global warming could
unlock vast stores of the greenhouse gas methane that are frozen
into the Arctic permafrost, setting off potentially significant
increases in global warming.

Now researchers at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, and
elsewhere say this change is under way in a little-studied area
under the sea, the East Siberian Arctic Shelf, west of the Bering
Strait.

Natalia Shakhova, a scientist at the university and a leader of
the study, said it was too soon to say whether the findings
suggest that a dangerous release of methane looms. In a telephone
news conference, she said researchers were only beginning to track
the movement of this methane into the atmosphere as the undersea
permafrost that traps it degrades.

But climate experts familiar with the new research reported in
Friday’s issue of the journal Science that even though it does not
suggest imminent climate catastrophe, it is important because of
methane’s role as a greenhouse gas. Although carbon dioxide is far
more abundant and persistent in the atmosphere, ton for ton
atmospheric methane traps at least 25 times as much heat.

Until recently, undersea permafrost has been little studied, but
work so far shows it is already sending surprising amounts of
methane into the atmosphere, Dr. Shakhova and other researchers
are finding.

Last year, scientists from Britain and Germany reported that they
had detected plumes of methane rising from the Arctic seabed in
the West Spitsbergen area, north of Scandinavia. At the time, they
said they had begun their work hoping to gain data to predict
future emissions and had not expected to find evidence that the
process was under way.

It is "indispensable" to keep track of methane in the region,
Martin Heimann of the Max Planck Institute in Germany said in a
commentary accompanying the Science report. So far, Dr. Heimann
wrote, methane contributions from Arctic permafrost have been
"negligible." He added: "But will this persist into the future
under sustained warming trends? We do not know."

In an e-mail message, Euan G. Nisbet of the University of London,
an expert on atmospheric methane, said the situation "needs to be
watched carefully."

Atmospheric concentrations of methane have more than doubled since
pre-industrial times, Dr. Heimann wrote. Most of it comes from
human activities including energy production, cattle raising and
the cultivation of rice. But about 40 percent is natural,
including the decomposition of organic materials in wetlands and
frozen wetlands like permafrost.

Dr. Shakhova said that permafrost in the East Siberian Arctic
Shelf, peat land that flooded as sea levels rose after the last
ice age, is degrading in part because runoff from rivers that feed
the Arctic Ocean is warmer than in the past.

She estimated that annual methane emissions from the East Siberian
Arctic Shelf total about seven teragrams. (A teragram is 1.1
million tons.) By some estimates, global methane emissions total
about 500 teragrams a year.

Dr. Shakhova said that undersea methane ordinarily undergoes
oxidation as it rises to the surface, where it is released as
carbon dioxide. But because water over the shelf is at most about
50 meters deep, she said, the gas bubbles to the surface there as
methane. As a result, she said, atmospheric levels of methane over
the Arctic are 1.85 parts per million, almost three times as high
as the global average of 0.6 or 0.7 parts per million.
Concentrations over the shelf are 2 parts per million or higher.

But, "I am not the person to judge" whether the Arctic findings
suggest that estimates of climate change in coming decades should
be rewritten, she added.

"I would not go so far as to suggest any implications," she
said. "We are at the very beginning of research."

Andrew C. Revkin contributed reporting.
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