CURWOOD: From the Jennifer and Ted Stanley Studios in Boston, this is Living on Earth. Im Steve Curwood. We begin this week with some startling news from the far north. There are millions of tons of the powerful greenhouse gas methane trapped underwater in the continental shelf of the Arctic Ocean. This methane had been held in place for thousands of years by a cap of frozen soil on the seabed. But now research at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks has found this methane is escaping into the atmosphere at faster and faster rates, adding to global warming in a feedback loop that accelerates the warming. Joining us by Skype to explain is Natalia Shakhova, lead author on the study. Welcome to Living on Earth. SHAKHOVA: I'm glad to be with you. CURWOOD: Now your research area was the East Siberian Arctic Shelf. Can you tell me about that? Why is that an important area for this type of research? SHAKHOVA: The East Siberian Arctic Shelf is important area because it composes a significant fraction of the Arctic Shelf. It is about 25 percent of the Arctic Continental Shelf, and why it is important is because the seabed of this shelf is very thick – its a few kilometers of thickness. And this includes in itself the so-called super carbon pool. It is covered with subsea permafrost. Permafrost is a frozen ground which is on top of the sediments and they serve as a cap preventing or capturing the methane escaping from the seabed. And because the permafrost was thought to be stable, and reliably preventing this methane escaping from the seabed deposits, this area has never been considered a source of methane to the atmosphere, never until very recently when started investigating this area ten years ago. CURWOOD: So what were the previous estimates about methane being released from this area of the Arctic, and how does that compare to what you have found in your research now? The sea surface above the East Siberian continental shelf of the Arctic Ocean is made up of broken ice and methane bubbling to the surface. (Igor Semiletove, University of Alaska Fairbanks) SHAKHOVA: During those five years of investigation we accumulated enough knowledge to report about eight million tons of methane escaping annually to the atmosphere of our planet. Now were budgeting about 17 teragrams, 17 million tons of methane escaping into the atmosphere of our planet, and this is on par with what Arctic tundra is currently emitting into our atmosphere, and Arctic tundra is thought to be the major source of methane, natural source of methane, in northern hemisphere, so its kind of comparable to terrestrial sources and it is even more important I think. CURWOOD: And why is that? SHAKHOVA: Important because in other ecosystems, methane, to be released, needs to be produced first, because methanogenesis is the process responsible for the origin of methane. In the sea bed, as I said, this methane has been producing for hundreds of thousands of years, but been prevented from escaping to the atmosphere because the permafrost on top of the sediment has been serving as a cap, as a seal, preventing the escape. CURWOOD: So if theres 17 million tons of methane coming from this East Siberian Arctic Shelf, the equivalency for carbon dioxide emissions is what, 20 times as much? SHAKHOVA: It is at least 20 times as much, from 20 times to 80 times, so if were talking the 17 teragrams of methane, and you can do your math, so youre coming up with much greater numbers in terms of the carbon dioxide equivalent for these emissions. CURWOOD: Yeah, I mean really, if its like 30 times…were talking about a half a billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. SHAKHOVA: Right, something about that. The concentration of methane in the atmosphere is increasing much faster than that of carbon dioxide. It means the last 200 years, the concentration of methane in the atmosphere increased about three times. This is much faster that what is carbon dioxide is increasing. This is the major concern of our scientific community. CURWOOD: So we have triple the amount of methane in the atmosphere today… SHAKHOVA: Almost that. Umm-hmm. CURWOOD: And methane doesnt last very long in the atmosphere. Its only there for 10, 20 years before it degrades into carbon dioxide. SHAKHOVA: After 10 years, right. CURWOOD: I gather one of the biggest concerns with this increase in methane release is that the Arctic has the potential to become a feedback loop. Can you explain that for us? SHAKHOVA: Absolutely. Absolutely correct, because warming of permafrost leads to its failure to prevent the carbon pool from releasing, and the carbon pool, and in particular the methane, which is ready to go, which has been accumulated for a long time, is what is releasing. And this methane serves as the greenhouse gas, which warms the planet again, which warms the Arctic. So this is the loop, when the Arctic is warming and releases more methane. This methane source to warm the Arctic, and this is how its this chain closes. CURWOOD: So youre saying the more methane that comes off the Arctic, the warmer things will get, which will lead to more methane coming off the Arctic… SHAKHOVA: This is exactly how it works. CURWOOD: This all sounds very scary. I mean, methanes a very powerful greenhouse gas, and if its coming out at this rapid rate, we could be in a lot of trouble. Prof. Natalia Shakhova leads the Russia-US methane study at the International Arctic Research Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. (Todd Paris, University of Alaska, Fairbanks.) SHAKHOVA: Yes, we could be, but we better believe in science and in ourselves because Im sure that we will be able to come up with ideas how to solve this problem, how to fix it, how to mitigate, how to maybe recover this methane. Because this, the methane, could be used as a fuel. It has some use for humanity, so we better utilize this methane as use for something important for us, rather than just being afraid of things, and there is no use in just being afraid. We need to learn more about this planet. We need to learn more about this planet, we need to learn how to live in agreement in peace with this planet. CURWOOD: Natalia Shakhova is Professor at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. Thanks so much for taking this time with us today. SHAKHOVA: Thank you so very much for having me. Thats been my pleasure, and my duty to inform you about the things we are investigating.
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