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A cabin door from a WWII outpost lies on the permafrost in Greenland
A cabin door from a WWII outpost lies on the permafrost in Greenland, 2015. Credit: Photon-Photos/iStock/Getty Images.
ICE
10 April 201716:24

Warming limit of 1.5C would ‘save’ huge expanses of permafrost, study says

Roz Pidcock

04.10.17

Roz Pidcock

10.04.2017 | 4:24pm
Ice Warming limit of 1.5C would ‘save’ huge expanses of permafrost, study says

The cost of allowing global temperature torise to 2C, rather than capping warming at 1.5C, is an area of permafrost the size of Mexico, according to new research.

Thestudy, carried out by a team of scientists from Sweden, Norway and the UK, is the first to work out what the ambitious targets contained in the Paris Agreement mean for permafrost loss.

While warming of 2C would ultimately see permafrost-covered land shrink by more than 40%, stabilising at 1.5C would “save” approximately 2m square km, says the new study.

The paper, published today in Nature Climate Change, warns that thawing permafrost unlocks large amounts of CO2 and methane, which could potentially be released to the atmosphere.

Thawing out

Permafrostis the name given to frozen soil that has been at a temperature of below 0C for at least two consecutive years. Currentlycoveringan area of approximately15msquare km in high latitudes, permafrost accounts for24%of exposed land in the northern hemisphere.

But permafrost is also known to be sensitive to rising temperatures. With the Arctic warmingtwice as fastas the rest of the world, large areas of permafrost are alreadystarting to thaw.

With roughly35 millionpeople living in the permafrost zone, the thawing landscape threatens communities by putting roads and buildings at risk of collapse.

Added to that, there are potentially seriousconsequencesfor the climate. Permafrost is estimated tocontainmore carbon than currently exists in the atmosphere, some of which can be released as CO2 and methane as the frozen soils begin to thaw.

AsDr Christina Schaedel, a research associate in effects of warming on permafrost at Northern Arizona University, wrote in a recentguest postfor Carbon Brief:

“As the soils thaw, the microbes they contain are woken from their ice-induced hibernation. The microbes feed on the organic carbon, converting it into carbon dioxide and methane, which is released into the atmosphere.”

Aerial view of a thawing permafrost peat plateau in northern Norway

Drone image: a thawing permafrost peat plateau in northern Norway. Credit: Sebastian Westermann.

While climatemodelsall predictpermafrostthawas high northern regions warm, they differ on how severe the impacts are likely to be, the paper explains. For example,model simulations of past changespredict a present day permafrost cover of anywhere between0.1 and 1.8 timesthe size of that actually observed.

The authors set out to examine how much permafrost would be lost with each degree of additional warming. First, the team looked at how the current distribution of permafrost changes in relation to air temperature. Then, they used this relationship to infer the likely pattern under specific warming levels, specifically 1.5C and 2C above pre-industrial times.

Permafrost is not exclusively determined by air temperature, with topography, soil properties and snow depth all playing a role, the authors acknowledge. Nevertheless, air temperature offers a good indication of the probability of finding permafrost in a region, the paper explains.

Shrinkage

According to the results, the area covered by carbon-rich frozen ground in the Arctic is expected to shrink by 4m square km for every extra degree that global average surface temperature rises.

Even accounting for uncertainties in air temperature, snow and other factors, this suggests permafrost is around 20% more susceptible to warming than previously thought, the paper says.

For 2C warming, the paper suggests 6.6m square km of permafrost would be lost, compared with a 1960-1990 baseline. This corresponds to over 40% of today’s permafrost area, leaving just over 8m square kilometres intact. Capping warming at 1.5C would likely “save” about 2m square kilometres of permafrost, leaving the total extent around the 10m square kilometre mark.

The figure below from the paper compares the maximum permafrost extent (red solid line) at 1.5C (left) and 2C (right). The shading represents permafrost cover during the 1960-1990 reference period, the orange squares indicate three cities build on continuous permafrost, which will face varying risks to their infrastructure depending on the level of warming.

Changes in permafrost extent under future warming. Shaded areas show historical distribution (1960–1990), with the scale from grey to blue indicating an increasing high permafrost fraction. Contours show the permafrost boundary with 1.5C (left) and 2C (right) of warming. Source: Chadburn et al., (2017)

Changes in permafrost extent under future warming. Shaded areas show historical distribution (1960–1990), with the scale from grey to blue indicating an increasing high permafrost fraction. Contours show the permafrost boundary with 1.5C (left) and 2C (right) of warming. Source: Chadburn et al., (2017)

Permafrost thaw wouldn’t happen immediately, the authors note. There would likely be a lag as soil temperatures caught up with air temperatures. A recentstudysuggests the result is likely to be agradual releaseof greenhouse gases over many decades, rather than anabrupt pulse.

While the effects wouldn’t be felt as soon as we pass the 1.5C or 2C threshold, the new results are very relevant for climate discussions surrounding theParis Agreement, say the authors. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will produce aSpecial Reportin 2018, for example, specificallydesignedto address the question of relative impacts at1.5C vs 2C.

The new paper looks at other temperature levels, too. With 5C of warming (similar to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’sRCP8.5scenario) by 2100, the vast majority of permafrost would disappear, leaving just 0.3-3 square kilometres unaffected, say the authors.

Carbon losses

While today’s paper is a first for comparing the extent of permafrost with 1.5C and 2C of warming, it doesn’t go as far as working out the likely consequences for carbon emissions.

With more than 1000bn tonnes of carbon estimated to be locked up in permafrost soils, the impacts for climate could be very significant, saysDr Sarah Chadburn, a specialist in Arctic permafrost modelling at the University of Exeter and lead author on the new paper. She tells Carbon Brief:

“It’s very likely that there will be carbon emissions from permafrost, but difficult to say how much.”

This is because converting permafrost loss into carbon emissions is far from trivial, saysProf Pierre Friedlingstein, a professor of global carbon cycling at the University of Exeter and co-author on the new research. There are big uncertainties over how much of the soil carbon will decompose, he tells Carbon Brief:

“Thawing of permafrost does not mean all permafrost carbon is eventually lost. A larger (deeper) amount of carbon will be accessible to decomposers, but certainly not the entire soil column.”

Map indicating the amount of carbon in the top three metres of permafrost soils. Reds and orange areas contain, located across much of Siberia and Canada, contain most carbon. Source: Shuur et al., (2015)

Map indicating the amount of carbon in the top three metres of permafrost soils. Reds and orange areas contain, located across much of Siberia and Canada, contain most carbon. Source: Shuur et al., (2015)

A further complication is that greenhouse gases released by permafrost could create warmer conditions and trigger the remineralisation of nutrients, says Friedlingstein. Both of these could help support vegetation growth, potentially locking some of the carbon back up in the soil.

Together with their colleagues, Chadburn and Friedlingstein have apapercurrently in review that aims to throw some light on the consequences of permafrost thaw on future climate. The study examines permafrost carbon emissions in variousclimate models and under different scenarios, finding that the extra boost to warming from thawing permafrost could be 0.2-12 % of the change in global mean temperature.

The team also have a separate project, called Climate feedbacks from wetlands and permafrost thaw in a warming world (CLIFFTOP), which aims to quantity the amount of methane likely to be released from thawing permafrost methane emissions under 1.5C and 2C scenarios. This isone of severalshort projectsfundedin 2016 by the Natural Environment Research Council, designed to feed directly into for the IPCC’s special report on 1.5C.

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