Sea absorbing less CO2, scientists discover
The Guardian, Jan. 12, 2009
Scientists
have issued a new warning about climate change after discovering a
sudden and dramatic collapse in the amount of carbon emissions absorbed
by the Sea of Japan.
The shift has alarmed experts, who blame global warming.
The
world's oceans soak up about 11bn tonnes of human carbon dioxide
pollution each year, about a quarter of all produced, and even a slight
weakening of this natural process would leave significantly more CO2 in
the atmosphere. That would require countries to adopt much stricter
emissions targets to prevent dangerous rises in temperature.
Kitack
Lee, an associate professor at Pohang University of Science and
Technology, who led the research, says the discovery is the "very first
observation that directly relates ocean CO2 uptake change to ocean
warming".
He says the warmer conditions disrupt a process known as "ventilation"
- the way seawater flows and mixes and drags absorbed CO2 from surface
waters to the depths. He warns that the effect is probably not confined
to the Sea of Japan. It could also affect CO2 uptake in the Atlantic
and Southern oceans.
"Our
result in the East Sea unequivocally demonstrated that oceanic uptake
of CO2 has been directly affected by warming-induced weakening of
vertical ventilation," he says. Korea argues that the Sea of Japan
should be renamed the East Sea, because it says the former is a legacy
of Japan's military expansion in the region.
Lee
adds: "In other words, the increase in atmospheric temperature due to
global warming can profoundly influence the ocean ventilation, thereby
decreasing the uptake rate of CO2."
Working
with Pavel Tishchenko of the Russian Pacific Oceanological Institute in
Vladivostok, Lee and his colleague Geun-Ha Park used a cruise on the
Professor Gagarinskiy, a Russian research vessel, last May to take
seawater samples from 24 sites across the Sea of Japan.
They
compared the dissolved CO2 in the seawater with similar samples
collected in 1992 and 1999. The results showed the amount of CO2
absorbed during 1999 to 2007 was half the level recorded from 1992 to
1999.
Crucially,
the study revealed that ocean mixing, a process required to deposit
carbon in deep water, where it is more likely to stay, appears to have
significantly weakened.
Announcing
their results in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, the
scientists say: "The striking feature is that nearly all anthropogenic
CO2 taken up in the recent period was confined to waters less than 300
metres in depth. The rapid and substantial reduction ... is surprising
and is attributed to considerable weakening of overturning
circulation."
Corinne
Le Quéré, an expert in ocean carbon storage at the University of East
Anglia, said: "We don't think the ocean is just going to completely
stop taking our carbon dioxide emissions, but if the effect weakens
then it has real consequences for the atmosphere."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jan/12/sea-co2-climate-japan-environment