NASA Measurements Show Greenhouse Gas Methane on the Rise Again

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Oct. 29, 2008

Steve Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

Jen Hirsch 
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 
617-253-1682 
jfhirsch@xxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-276

NASA MEASUREMENTS SHOW GREENHOUSE GAS METHANE ON THE RISE AGAIN

WASHINGTON -- The amount of methane in Earth's atmosphere shot up in 
2007, bringing to an end approximately a decade in which atmospheric 
levels of the potent greenhouse gas were essentially stable. The new 
study is based on data from a worldwide NASA-funded measurement 
network. 

Methane levels in the atmosphere have more than tripled since 
pre-industrial times, accounting for around one-fifth of the human 
contribution to greenhouse gas-driven global warming. Until recently, 
the leveling off of methane levels had suggested that the rate of its 
emission from Earth's surface was being approximately balanced by the 
rate of its destruction in the atmosphere. 

However, the balance has been upset since early 2007, according to 
research published this week in the American Geophysical Union's 
"Geophysical Review Letters." The paper's lead authors, Matthew Rigby 
and Ronald Prinn of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, say 
this imbalance has resulted in several million metric tons of 
additional methane in the atmosphere. 

Methane is produced by wetlands, rice paddies, cattle, and the gas and 
coal industries. It is destroyed in the atmosphere by reaction with 
the hydroxyl free radical, often referred to as the atmosphere's 
"cleanser." 

"This increase in methane is worrisome because the recent stability of 
methane levels was helping to compensate for the unexpectedly fast 
growth of carbon dioxide emissions," said climate modeler Drew 
Shindell at NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York. 

"If methane continues to increase rapidly, we'll lose that offsetting 
effect. We will use NASA's climate modeling capability to improve our 
understanding of what is causing the increase and project future 
methane levels." 

One surprising feature of this recent growth is that it occurred 
almost simultaneously at all measurement locations across the globe. 
However, the majority of methane emissions are in the Northern 
Hemisphere, and it takes more than one year for gases to be mixed 
between the hemispheres. Theoretical analysis of the measurements 
shows that if an increase in emissions is solely responsible, these 
emissions must have risen by a similar amount in both hemispheres at 
the same time. 

The scientists analyzed air samples collected by the NASA-funded 
Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment ground network from 1997 
through April 2008. The network was created in the 1970s in response 
to international concerns about chemicals depleting the ozone layer. 
It is supported by NASA as part of its congressional mandate to 
monitor ozone-depleting trace gases, many of which also are 
greenhouse gases. Air samples are collected and analyzed at several 
stations around the world. 

According to the researchers, a rise in Northern Hemispheric emissions 
may be a result of very warm conditions over Siberia throughout 2007, 
potentially leading to increased bacterial emissions from wetland 
areas. However, a potential cause for an increase in Southern 
Hemispheric emissions is less clear. 

An alternative explanation for the rise may lie, at least in part, 
with a drop in the concentrations of the methane-destroying hydroxyl 
free radical. Theoretical studies show that if this has happened, the 
required global methane emissions rise would have been smaller and 
more strongly biased to the Northern Hemisphere. At present, however, 
it is uncertain whether such a drop in hydroxyl free radical 
concentrations did occur. 

"The next step to pin down the cause of the methane increase will be 
to study this using a very high-resolution atmospheric circulation 
model and additional measurements from other networks," Prinn said. 
"The key is to determine more precisely the relative roles of 
increased methane emission versus a decrease in the rate of removal. 
Apparently we have a mix of the two, but we want to know how much of 
each is responsible for the overall increase." 

It is too early to tell whether this increase represents a return to 
sustained methane growth, or the beginning of a relatively 
short-lived anomaly, according to Rigby and Prinn. Given that methane 
is about 25 times stronger as a greenhouse gas per metric ton of 
emissions than carbon dioxide, the situation will require careful 
monitoring in the near future to better understand methane's impact 
on future climate change. 

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 










http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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