Abstract link
http://m.sciencemag.org/content/early/2013/02/20/science.1228729.abstract?sid=d26b1542-62e0-4aa0-9239-a82abda2d1ad

Major methane release is almost inevitable

19:00 21 February 2013 by Michael Marshall

We are on the cusp of a tipping point in the climate. If the global climate
warms another few tenths of a degree, a large expanse of the Siberian
permafrost will start to melt uncontrollably. The result: a significant
amount of extra greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere, and a threat
– ironically – to the infrastructure that carries natural gas from Russia
to Europe.The Arctic is warming faster than the rest of the planet, and
climatologists have long warned that this will cause positive feedbacks
that will speed up climate change further. The region is home to enormous
stores of organic carbon, mostly in the form of permafrost soils and icy
clathrates that trap methane – a powerful greenhouse gas that could escape
into the atmosphere.The Siberian permafrost is a particular danger. A large
region called the Yedoma could undergo runaway decomposition once it starts
to melt, because microbes in the soil would eat the carbon and produce
heat, melting more soil and releasing ever more greenhouse gases. In short,
the melting of Yedoma is a tipping point: once it starts, there may be no
stopping it.For the first time, we have an indication of when this could
start happening. Anton Vaks of the University of Oxford in the UK and
colleagues have reconstructed the history of the Siberian permafrost going
back 500,000 years. We already know how global temperatures have risen and
fallen as ice sheets have advanced and retreated, so Vaks's team's record
of changing permafrost gives an indication of how sensitive it is to
changing temperatures.

Stalagmite record

But there is no direct record of how the permafrost has changed, so Vaks
had to find an indirect method. His team visited six caves that run along a
south-north line, with the two southernmost ones being under the Gobi
desert. Further north, three caves sit beneath a landscape of sporadic
patches of permafrost, and the northernmost cave is right at the edge of
Siberia's continuous permafrost zone.The team focused on the 500,000-year
history of stalagmites and similar rock formations in the caves.
"Stalagmites only grow when water flows into caves," Vaks says. "It cannot
happen when the soil is frozen." The team used radiometric dating to
determine how old the stalagmites were. By building up a record of when
they grew, Vaks could figure out when the ground above the caves was frozen
and when it wasn't.As expected, in most of the caves, stalagmites formed
during every warm interglacial period as the patchy permafrost melted
overhead.But it took a particularly warm interglacial, from 424,000 and
374,000 years ago, for the stalagmites in the northernmost cave to grow –
suggesting the continuous permafrost overhead melted just once in the last
500,000 years.At the time, global temperatures were 1.5 °C warmer than they
have been in the last 10,000 years. In other words, today's permafrost is
likely to become vulnerable when we hit 1.5 °C of global warming, says
Vaks."Up until this point, we didn't have direct evidence of how this
happened in past warming periods," says Ted Schuur of the University of
Florida in Gainesville.It will be very hard to stop the permafrost
degrading as a warming of 1.5 °C is not far off. Between 1850 and 2005,
global temperatures rose 0.8 °C, according to the 2007 report of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Even if humanity stopped
emitting greenhouse gases tomorrow, temperatures would rise another 0.2 °C
over the next 20 years. That would leave a window of 0.5 °C – but in fact
our emissions are increasing. What's more, new fossil fuel power stations
commit us to several decades of emissions.

Soggy permafrost

What are the consequences? The greatest concern, says Tim Lenton of the
University of Exeter in the UK, is the regional landscape. Buildings and
infrastructure are often built on hard permafrost, and will start
subsiding. "Ice roads won't exist any more."The increasingly soggy
permafrost will also threaten the pipelines that transport Russian gas to
Europe. "The maintenance and upkeep of that infrastructure is going to cost
a lot more," says Schuur.As for the methane that could be released into the
atmosphere, Schuur estimates that emissions will be equivalent to between
160 and 290 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide.That sounds like a lot, but is
little compared to the vast amount humans are likely to emit, says Lenton.
"The signal's going to be swamped by fossil fuel [emissions]."He says the
dangers of the permafrost greenhouse gases have been overhyped,
particularly as much of the methane will be converted to carbon dioxide by
microbes in the soil, leading to a slower warming effect.Schurr agrees with
Lenton that the methane emissions are "not a runaway effect but an
additional source that is not accounted in current climate models".Journal
reference: Science, DOI: 10.1126/science.1228729

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