Permafrost degradation and methane: low risk of biogeochemical climate-warming feedback

Joint Program Reprint • Journal Article
Permafrost degradation and methane: low risk of biogeochemical climate-warming feedback
Gao, X. C.A. Schlosser, A. Sokolov, K.W. Anthony, Q. Zhuang and D. Kicklighter (2013)
Environmental Research Letters, 8(3): 035014

Reprint 2013-10 [Download]

Abstract/Summary:

Climate change and permafrost thaw have been suggested to increase high latitude methane emissions that could potentially represent a strong feedback to the climate system. Using an integrated earth-system model framework, we examine the degradation of near-surface permafrost, temporal dynamics of inundation (lakes and wetlands) induced by hydro-climatic change, subsequent methane emission, and potential climate feedback. We find that increases in atmospheric CH4 and its radiative forcing, which result from the thawed, inundated emission sources, are small, particularly when weighed against human emissions. The additional warming, across the range of climate policy and uncertainties in the climate-system response, would be no greater than 0.1 ° C by 2100. Further, for this temperature feedback to be doubled (to approximately 0.2 ° C) by 2100, at least a 25-fold increase in the methane emission that results from the estimated permafrost degradation would be required. Overall, this biogeochemical global climate-warming feedback is relatively small whether or not humans choose to constrain global emissions.

© 2013 the authors

Citation:

Gao, X. C.A. Schlosser, A. Sokolov, K.W. Anthony, Q. Zhuang and D. Kicklighter (2013): Permafrost degradation and methane: low risk of biogeochemical climate-warming feedback. Environmental Research Letters, 8(3): 035014 (http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/8/3/035014)
  • Joint Program Reprint
  • Journal Article
Permafrost degradation and methane: low risk of biogeochemical climate-warming feedback

Gao, X. C.A. Schlosser, A. Sokolov, K.W. Anthony, Q. Zhuang and D. Kicklighter

Abstract/Summary: 

Climate change and permafrost thaw have been suggested to increase high latitude methane emissions that could potentially represent a strong feedback to the climate system. Using an integrated earth-system model framework, we examine the degradation of near-surface permafrost, temporal dynamics of inundation (lakes and wetlands) induced by hydro-climatic change, subsequent methane emission, and potential climate feedback. We find that increases in atmospheric CH4 and its radiative forcing, which result from the thawed, inundated emission sources, are small, particularly when weighed against human emissions. The additional warming, across the range of climate policy and uncertainties in the climate-system response, would be no greater than 0.1 ° C by 2100. Further, for this temperature feedback to be doubled (to approximately 0.2 ° C) by 2100, at least a 25-fold increase in the methane emission that results from the estimated permafrost degradation would be required. Overall, this biogeochemical global climate-warming feedback is relatively small whether or not humans choose to constrain global emissions.

© 2013 the authors

Supersedes: 

Permafrost, Lakes, and Climate-Warming Methane Feedback: What is the Worst We Can Expect?