https://vancouversun.com/opinion/michael-brown-and-duane-froese-thawing-permafrost-is-a-northern-crisis-and-a-global-threat

Michael Brown and Duane Froese: Thawing permafrost is a northern crisis and
a global threat
Opinion: Unconstrained, Canada’s permafrost could be releasing more carbon
than is currently being generated by all human activities across the
country. This raises three stark concerns and a pressing opportunity.

Author of the article:Michael J. Brown and Dr. Duane Froese
Publishing date:Feb 27, 2021  •  8 hours ago  •  5 minute read  •  comment
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The north coast of Banks Island shows exposed ice along the cliff face.
This formation is being eroded by wave action abetted by higher
temperatures and decreased sea ice.
The north coast of Banks Island shows exposed ice along the cliff face.
This formation is being eroded by wave action abetted by higher
temperatures and decreased sea ice. jpg
Article content
Among the too-few Canadians who give it much thought, there is a dangerous
misconception that thawing permafrost is a local issue, safely ignored if
you don’t live in northern Canada.

Certainly, permafrost thaw is a dramatic, disruptive, and super-expensive
local issue. Much of Canada’s northern infrastructure was built on ground
that everyone assumed was going to stay cold and stable “permanently.” But
with climate change warming the north at more than twice the global rate,
that ground is thawing — turning, in effect, from concrete to porridge.
Once-solid ground is heaving and buckling, slumping down hills or sliding
into the sea, undermining or destroying roads and airports, homes, public
buildings, even pipelines.

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The Northwest Territories Association of Communities estimates current
levels of infrastructure damage at $1.2 billion to $1.6 billion — and
that’s just in the N.W.T. (population 44,000) and doesn’t include impacts
in Nunavut, Yukon and northern Quebec.

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But there is another, even bigger permafrost issue — one that reaches every
corner of the globe. In addition to providing a no-longer-reliable building
foundation, permafrost also holds a staggering amount of carbon, the
remnants of plants, animals, and microbes that lived and died in tundra and
boreal ecosystems, and then accumulated in soils over thousands of years.
This sequestered carbon is nearly double the carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere, and nearly three times the carbon stored in all the forests on
earth. As northern regions warm and ground thaws, this long-stored organic
matter begins to decompose, releasing carbon dioxide and methane, an
even-more-powerful greenhouse gas. Where permafrost used to be a carbon
sink — a place that absorbed more carbon dioxide every year in plant
material — there is increasing evidence that it has transitioned from a
carbon sink to a net source of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere.

This is the permafrost carbon feedback: warming promotes thaw, which
liberates greenhouse gases, which causes more warming. Unconstrained,
Canada’s permafrost could be releasing more carbon than is currently being
generated by all human activities across the country. At that point — in
theory, at least — Canadians could stop generating greenhouse gases
entirely and the problem would continue to get worse.

This raises three stark concerns, and a pressing opportunity:

First, too few people are aware that the permafrost carbon feedback is an
issue.

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Second, when they find out, many people are inclined to freak out —
understandably. Global warming can already seem like an insurmountable
problem. The idea that there may be dangerous tipping points in our future
can lead some people to despair and inaction. (Certainly, the best time to
have dealt with this issue was in the past, but the next-best time is now.)

Third, no government in the world is currently making permafrost carbon
feedback-specific policy domestically or advocating for action through
organizations such as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change. That’s understandable, too. This is an incredibly complex problem,
demanding cooperation across numerous jurisdictions — for many, it might
still seem a bridge too far.

As well, because the affected territory is so vast (covering 25 per cent of
the earth’s land mass) — and the science is still progressing — some argue
that we should hold off taking action.

But, as the University of Toronto ethicist Kerry Bowman has pointed out,
when a problem could be this devastating, the precautionary principle
demands that we begin mitigating action even as we work to better
understand the scale and timing of the threat. The COVID-19 pandemic has
provided a sharp reminder of the truth of that lesson.

The writer James Baldwin also had something useful to say for situations
such as this: “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can
be changed until it is faced.”

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Given the scale and distributed nature of the problem, there are,
currently, no actual solutions. But there may be strategies that can buy us
time while we move along the path to global decarbonation. These fall into
three categories:

1. Options for limiting thaw in specific regions: for example, by solar
radiation management (reflecting solar energy back into space).

2. Options for limiting greenhouse gas emissions locally and/or restoring
the permafrost’s capacity to become a carbon sink: for example, by
promoting the growth of plant matter that absorbs CO2, including grasses
that reflect solar energy in the summer and (unlike trees) don’t insulate
the ground from winter cold.

3. Methods by which to capture and sequester carbon dioxide or treat
methane, reducing the risks of temperature increases over the whole earth.

Above all, we need a clearer understanding of the threat and a pathway on
which to proceed. And that is the mission of the Permafrost Carbon Feedback
Action Group, a privately funded organization allied with the Canadian
Permafrost Association, and working (with the endorsement of Jonathan
Wilkinson, minister of Environment and Climate Change Canada) to develop a
PCF Intervention Roadmap. The idea is to create a playbook that supports
advancements in science while also identifying, assessing, and prioritizing
mechanisms for mitigating and/or adapting to permafrost thaw and carbon
feedback. Such a roadmap would be useful to everyone from policymakers to
investors.

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As a first order of business, the PCFAG is convening a four-part dialogue,
commencing March 4, featuring a series of international experts in science,
policy, technology, and ethics, and which includes representatives of
Indigenous people who are most at risk from the immediate effects of
permafrost thaw. The list of leading-in-their-field delegates is already
well over 100, with representatives from 14 countries, across the
circumpolar region and around the world. (For more information on the
dialogues, email: [email protected]. To register for any of the
dialogues, go to: bookwhen.com/pcf)

In a very literal way, permafrost has been the glue that has held the north
together. The people of the north cannot ignore its decline — given the
risk of permafrost carbon feedback, none of us can. The sooner we face it —
the sooner we learn the lessons of science and reach out with support and
mitigation measures for people of the north and for our circumpolar
neighbours — the better our chance to ensure that PCF never pushes us past
the point of no return.

Michael Brown, a venture capitalist with long influence in the clean
technology sector, is co-founder (with the Canadian Permafrost Association)
and chair of the Permafrost Carbon Feedback Action Group, of which Duane
Froese, University of Alberta professor and Canada Research Chair (Earth
and Atmospheric Sciences), is a member.

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