Global Warming Enabled Russia's Arctic Land Grab, and Now It Could Get Worse.
Any lingering doubts about how ill-prepared we are to face up to the reality of climate change should have been laid to rest this month when two Russian mini-submarines dove two miles under the Arctic ice to plant a Russian flag made of titanium on the seabed. The government of Vladimir V. Putin claims that the seabed under the North Pole, known as the Lomonosov Ridge, is an extension of Russia's continental shelf and therefore Russian territory that will be open for oil exploration.![]()
Russia is not alone in making such a claim. Geologists think that 25% of Earth's undiscovered oil and gas may be embedded in the rock under the Arctic Ocean. No wonder Norway, Canada and Denmark (through its possession of Greenland) are all using the continental-shelf argument to claim the Arctic seabed as an extension of their own sovereign territories. The sudden interest in Arctic oil and gas has put a fire under U.S. lawmakers to ratify the 1982 Law of the Sea Treaty, which allows signatory nations to claim exclusive commercial exploitation zones up to 200 miles out from their coastlines.
What makes this development so depressing is that the interest in prospecting the Arctic seabed, and subsoil, is only now becoming possible because climate change is melting away Arctic ice.
For thousands of years, the fossil fuel deposits lay locked under the ice and inaccessible. Ironically, the very process of burning fossil fuels releases massive amounts of carbon dioxide, or CO2, and forces an increase in the Earth's temperature, which in turn melts the Arctic ice, making available even more oil and gas for energy. Burning these potential oil and gas finds would further increase CO2 emissions in coming decades, depleting the Arctic ice even more quickly.
But there is an even more dangerous aspect to the unfolding drama in the Arctic. While governments and oil giants are hoping the melting ice will allow them access to the world's last treasure trove of oil and gas, climatologists are deeply worried about something else buried under the ice that, if unearthed, could wreak havoc on the biosphere, with dire consequences for human life.
Much of the Siberian sub-Arctic region, an area the size of France and Germany combined, is a vast, frozen peat bog. Before the most recent Ice Age, the area was mostly grassland, teeming with wildlife. The coming of the glaciers entombed the organic matter below the permafrost, where it has remained ever since. Although the surface of Siberia is largely barren, there is as much organic matter buried underneath the permafrost as there is in all of the world's tropical rain forests.
Now the permafrost is thawing on land and along the seabeds. If it occurs in the presence of oxygen on land, the decomposing of organic matter leads to the production of CO2. If the permafrost thaws along lake shelves, in the absence of oxygen, the decomposing matter releases methane. Methane is the most potent of the greenhouse gases, with a greenhouse effect 23 times that of CO2.
Katey Walter of the Institute of Arctic Biology at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks wrote in the journal Nature last year, and in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society in May, that the melting of the permafrost and subsequent release of methane is a "ticking time bomb."
Walter and her researchers warned of a tipping point sometime within this century, when the release of methane could create an uncontrollable feedback effect, dramatically warming the atmosphere, which would in turn warm the land, lakes and seabed, further melting the permafrost and releasing more methane. Once that threshold is reached, there will be nothing humans can do. Scientists suspect that similar events have occurred in the ancient past, between glacial periods.
Scientists are particularly concerned that the thawing permafrost is also creating shadow lakes across the Siberian sub-Arctic landscape. The lake waters have a higher ambient temperature than the surrounding permafrost. As a result, the permafrost near the lakes thaws more quickly, forcing the ground surfaces to collapse into the lakes. The stored organic carbon then decomposes into the lake bottoms. Methane from that decomposition bubbles to the surface and escapes into the atmosphere. Scientists calculate that thousands of tons of methane will be released from Arctic lakes as the permafrost thaws.
A global tragedy of monumental proportions is unfolding at the top of the world, and the human race is all but oblivious to what's happening.
When U.S. astronauts stepped onto the moon in 1969, Neil Armstrong's first words were, "One small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." The Russian aquanauts, landing on the Arctic seabed, might just as well have said, "One small dive for man, one giant leap backward for life on Earth."
Jeremy Rifkin is the author of "The Hydrogen Economy: The Creation of the World Wide Energy Web and the Redistribution of Power on Earth."
© 2007 The Los Angeles Times
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14 Comments so far
Show AllMoscow has as much right to claim this as theirs as would any other nation claim an un populated area for themselves as countries have done throughout history. Possession is still nine tenths of the law, and it always has been. Is that a problem for W and his neo con gang? Who gives a do do?
KEM AND PJD
but i haven't gone yet kem!!!!
thankyou pjd for that explanation. but wouldn't someone have to strike a match first????? (just being silly here!!)
I believe the gist of this article is a bit silly, the Russians planting flags on a seabed. Any country could do the same thing I suppose, near the entrances to the Panama Canal and demand payment for any ships that transgressed their newly claimed territory.
Karlof1, I do believe, you are correct.
You explained it perfectly PJD. KA-BOOM! A dead planet, no atmosphere after the flames die down,___ another Mars.
We're gonna miss you Coco.
The methane won't be anything near the concentration to affect us physiologically, and we don't have to worry that it would because it would first reach the 5% lower explosive limit and the whole atmosphere would explode - like what can happen to the air in a coal mine.
But at just a few dozen PPM, methane is a very potent greenhouse gas and it is believed that a methane hydrate "burp" and runaway global warming was the cause of the great Permian thermal maximum event that wiped out about 95% of all life on earth.
KEM PATRICK,
you said in another post on a different article, that you might joke too much. i don't think so. in this "scary" environment we are living, we need to laugh. but i want to know exactly what will happen if this stuff is released. will we all be gasping for air, or just slowly go to sleep as if we had a big plastic bag over our heads?? i've done the search on methane hydrate and it all sounds pretty realistic to me. i'm just curious to know HOW it will affect us physiologically. so kem, if you have any answers to this i would appreciate it.
thankyou,
coco.
" climatologists are deeply worried about something else buried under the ice that, if unearthed, could wreak havoc on the biosphere"
Godzilla? (please be Godzilla...please be Godzilla...)
"there is as much organic matter buried underneath the permafrost as there is in all of the world's tropical rain forests."
Damn it.
Actually, Russia, the USA, UK, or any other country with submarines could have planted their country's flag on the arctic ocean floor and made a claim similar to Russia's. "Land grab" is a very poor choice since "land" is dry by definition.
Yes, Manbearpig is real. However, another reality is pigchickenturd in other words the Bush administration, his generals, and the republicans.
Great article - explains in detail what Kem Patrick was discussing in the other blog about climate change today.
So nobody wants to believe Al Gore?
I know this may sound Utopian, but it would be nice if the world could share all of this. The arctic region is almost like another world and for one nation to claim it seems wrong.
Since a lot of the world uses oil and more countries are developing and becoming dependent on oil for that development, maybe we could all work something out. It might loosen the grip of OPEC or any nation to control the fate of others.
Even worse, The uppermost Arctic, the North Pole, also houses the doorway to the planet's major gold depository. Earth's core is mostly iron, laced with other minerals and heavy metals. However, there are millions of tons of gold in Earths's core and much is liquid, due to the enormous heat generated in the inner core of our planet. The Russians aren't stupiid. Earth does have a heart of Gold and they know it.
Bush is!___ We'd better lay claim to the Exact center of the South Pole and have the back door to the gold mine. There is much more gold near the top of Earth's core than there is at the South Pole, that is why our planet is unstable and wobbles as much as it does as it rotates. The wobble causes the earth's granite plates to slide and massive earth quakes result. Luckily, the gravitational pull of our moon prevents Earth from tumbling out of control and exploding.
How's that for straying off of the subject?
Well humans are greedy and stupid so no surprise. Its just too bad peaceful indigenous arctic inhabitants(not Inuit-they arent indigenous since they would freeze to death if they were walking around naked--unlike the real natives) like polar bears, seals etc have to suffer for it.