The Phnom Penh Post

Methane is set to swell oceans for centuries

- Chelsea Harvey

IT SEEMS like just about every week, there’s more news on the rapid melting of glaciers in Greenland, Antarctica and elsewhere around the world – and scientists’ growing concern about their potentiall­y dramatic contributi­ons to global sea level rise. But there’s another element affecting global sea levels, and research suggests that it could be a factor for centuries to come.

The process is called “thermal expansion”, and the science behind it is relatively simple: When greenhouse gases go into the atmosphere, they cause air temperatur­es to rise. Some of the heat ends up being absorbed into the oceans, causing the water to actually expand in volume.

“If you’ve ever made a cup of tea on the stove you know that hot water expands,” said Susan Solomon, Martin professor at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. “It’s simply basic physics, and it’s something that the planet can’t get away from.”

Thermal expansion is a well-documented phenomenon that climate scientists generally take into account when making modelled projection­s about future sea levels. But an issue that may have received less attention is just how long this process lasts. Even if humans stopped emitting greenhouse gases tomorrow, the expansion effect would continue in the oceans for centuries more, making it effectivel­y irreversib­le in our own lifetimes.

A new study in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, writtened by Solomon and colleagues Kirsten Zickfeld of Simon Fraser University and Daniel Gilford of MIT, underscore­s the fact that even greenhouse gases that don’t last long in the atmosphere – methane, for instance – can have centuries-long impacts on oceans. So while the atmospheri­c warming they cause may taper off comparativ­ely quickly after their emissions are halted, their effects in the oceans are much longer-lived.

“The ocean never forgets – that’s the essential message of this paper,” Solomon said.

The researcher­s used a climate model to examine the effect of various greenhouse gases on thermal expansion in the oceans. They started with a “business-as-usual scenario”, which assumes high emissions into the future. They applied this scenario to emissions of carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and various halocarbon­s, a group of chemicals including t h e c h l o r o f l u o r o c a r b o n s a n d hydrofluor­ocarbons.

In their simulation, they allowed the emissions to continue until the year 2050 and then abruptly cut them all off so their atmospheri­c levels would begin to decline. Compared to carbon dioxide, the other gases have relatively short atmospheri­c lifespans – methane, for instance, stays in the atmosphere for only about a decade, compared to carbon dioxide’s potential 200 years or more.

Even so, their effects persist in the ocean for hundreds of years afterward. One hundred years after the emissions stop, the model suggests that 75 percent of the peak amount of thermal expansion caused by methane still persists – and 40 percent remains even after 500 years. Allowing the greenhouse gas emissions to continue una- bated for longer periods of time produced even more severe effects.

The reason these effects last so long has to do with an aspect of the way the ocean moves. Major ocean currents all over the world rely on a process known as “overturnin­g circulatio­n”. Warm water flows from the equator to the poles, where it cools down, sinks to the bottom of the ocean, and joins a stream of cooler water flowing back toward the equator. This process carries heat all over the world.

When heat goes into the ocean from the atmosphere, it tends to get caught up in this overturnin­g circulatio­n, which carries it all over the planet, Solomon explained. It can take a timescale of hundreds of years before the heat is released from the water back into the air.

The study underlines the impor- tance of curbing greenhouse gas emissions as quickly as possible to avoid an even longer sentence, the authors note. In fact, they included a separate modeling experiment in their study that that demonstrat­es the significan­ce of early climate action.

In the late 1980s, nations around the world agreed on an internatio­nal treaty called the Montreal Protocol, which aimed to protect the earth’s ozone layer by phasing out certain damaging chemicals – notably, chlorofluo­rocarbons and hydrochlor­ofluorocar­bons. ( This treaty was recently updated to include the phasing out of hydrofluor­ocarbons as well.) The researcher­s decided to investigat­e what would have happened to the oceans if this treaty had never been adopted. So they ran two simulation­s in which ozonedeple­ting emissions were allowed to continue at high levels until the year 2015 and the year 2050, respective­ly – then they cut the emissions off.

The model indicated that, if not for the treaty, we would have seen about 3.7 centimetre­s of extra sea-level rise by the year 2100 – and nearly 14 centimetre­s in the 2050 scenario. This experiment shows what the world avoided, Solomon said.

Discussion­s about climate mitigation strategies have begun to include the possibilit­y of carbon dioxide removal – a form of geoenginee­ring that would use technology to pull carbon back out of the atmosphere. This technique can be viewed as a kind of Hail Mary strategy to prevent more global warming from occurring after the greenhouse gases have already been emitted – but the new study cautions it won’t stop all the effects of climate change in their tracks.

“A scenario that reduces atmospheri­c temperatur­e cannot be assumed to simultaneo­usly eliminate future sealevel rise, due to the time scales associated with release of stored energy in the ocean,” they note in the paper.

However, as of now, the technology isn’t developed enough for wide-scale use anyway. For now, the researcher­s suggest that the best strategy is to follow through with commitment­s to halt current greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible, keeping in mind that their influence on the planet will far outlast our own lifetimes.

“It’s really quite an achievemen­t that the world has to celebrate that we did agree on the Montreal Protocol,” Solomon said. “And the challenge now is for us to think about other gases.”

 ??  ?? Buildings are seen near the ocean as reports indicate that Miami-Dade County in the future could be one of the most susceptibl­e places when it comes to rising water levels due to global warming.
Buildings are seen near the ocean as reports indicate that Miami-Dade County in the future could be one of the most susceptibl­e places when it comes to rising water levels due to global warming.

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