Atmospheric Methane: Comparison Between Methane's Record in 2006–2022 and During Glacial Terminations

Author:

Nisbet Euan G.1ORCID,Manning Martin R.2ORCID,Dlugokencky Ed J.3ORCID,Michel Sylvia Englund4,Lan Xin35,Röckmann Thomas6,Denier van der Gon Hugo A. C.7ORCID,Schmitt Jochen8ORCID,Palmer Paul I.9ORCID,Dyonisius Michael N.10,Oh Youmi35,Fisher Rebecca E.1,Lowry David1ORCID,France James L.111,White James W. C.12,Brailsford Gordon13,Bromley Tony13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth Science, Royal Holloway University of London Egham UK

2. School of Geography, Environment and Earth Sciences Victoria University of Wellington Waikanae New Zealand

3. NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory Boulder CO USA

4. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

5. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

6. Institute for Marine and Atmospheric Research Utrecht (IMAU) Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

7. Department of Climate, Air and Sustainability TNO Utrecht The Netherlands

8. Climate and Environmental Physics and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern Switzerland

9. School of GeoSciences University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

10. Physics of Ice, Climate and Earth Niels Bohr Institute Copenhagen Denmark

11. Environmental Defense Fund London UK

12. College of Arts and Sciences University of North Carolina Chapel Hill NC USA

13. National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research Ltd (NIWA) Wellington New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractAtmospheric methane's rapid growth from late 2006 is unprecedented in the observational record. Assessment of atmospheric methane data attributes a large fraction of this atmospheric growth to increased natural emissions over the tropics, which appear to be responding to changes in anthropogenic climate forcing. Isotopically lighter measurements of are consistent with the recent atmospheric methane growth being mainly driven by an increase in emissions from microbial sources, particularly wetlands. The global methane budget is currently in disequilibrium and new inputs are as yet poorly quantified. Although microbial emissions from agriculture and waste sources have increased between 2006 and 2022 by perhaps 35 Tg/yr, with wide uncertainty, approximately another 35–45 Tg/yr of the recent net growth in methane emissions may have been driven by natural biogenic processes, especially wetland feedbacks to climate change. A model comparison shows that recent changes may be comparable or greater in scale and speed than methane's growth and isotopic shift during past glacial/interglacial termination events. It remains possible that methane's current growth is within the range of Holocene variability, but it is also possible that methane's recent growth and isotopic shift may indicate a large‐scale reorganization of the natural climate and biosphere is under way.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

European Commission

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Atmospheric Science,General Environmental Science,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Slaying the methane minotaur;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2023-11-27

2. Tracing sources of atmospheric methane using clumped isotopes;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences;2023-11-13

3. What controls ozone sensitivity in the upper tropical troposphere?;Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics;2023-10-11

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