An alarmist prediction so bad, even Gavin Schmidt thinks it is implausible

Gosh, it’s that “methane ‘splode” again. This time the Guardian makes an easily testable hypothesis emblazoned in the headlines that we’ll be sure to remind them of in two years.

Guardian_methane_splode

Even Gavin Schmidt is panning this one, see below. From the University of Cambridge

Cost of Arctic methane release could be ‘size of global economy’ warn experts

Economic modelling shows that the methane emissions caused by shrinking sea ice from just one area of the Arctic could come with a global price tag of 60 trillion dollars — the size of the world economy in 2012

Researchers have warned of an “economic time-bomb” in the Arctic, following a ground-breaking analysis of the likely cost of methane emissions in the region.

Writing in a Comment piece in the journal, Nature, academics argue that a significant release of methane from thawing permafrost in the Arctic could have dire implications for the world’s economy. The researchers, from Cambridge and Rotterdam, have for the first time calculated the potential economic impact of a scenario some scientists consider increasingly likely – that methane from the East Siberian Sea will be emitted as a result of the thaw.

This constitutes just a fraction of the vast reservoirs of methane in the Arctic, but scientists believe that the release of even a small proportion of these reserves could trigger possibly catastrophic climate change. According to the new assessment, the emission of methane below the East Siberian Sea alone would also have a mean global impact of 60 trillion dollars.

The ground-breaking Comment piece was co-authored by Gail Whiteman, from Erasmus University; Chris Hope, Reader in Policy Modelling at Cambridge Judge Business School, University of Cambridge; and Peter Wadhams, Professor of Ocean physics at the University of Cambridge.

“The global impact of a warming Arctic is an economic time-bomb”, Whiteman, who is Professor of sustainability, management and climate change at Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University (RSM), said.

Wadhams added: “The imminent disappearance of the summer sea ice in the Arctic will have enormous implications for both the acceleration of climate change, and the release of methane from off-shore waters which are now able to warm up in the summer. This massive methane boost will have major implications for global economies and societies.”

Most discussion about the economic implications of a warming Arctic focuses on benefits to the region, with increased oil-and-gas drilling and the opening up of new shipping routes that could attract investments of hundreds of billions of dollars. However, the effects of melting permafrost on the climate and oceans will be felt globally, the authors argue.

Applying an updated version of the modelling method used in the UK government’s 2006 Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change, and currently used by the US Environmental Protection Agency, the authors calculate the global consequences of the release of 50 gigatonnes of methane over a decade from thawing permafrost beneath the East Siberian Sea.

“The methane release would bring forward the date at which the global mean temperature rise exceeds 2 degrees C by between 15 and 35 years,” said Chris Hope. “In the absence of climate-change mitigation measures, the PAGE09 model calculates that it would increase mean global climate impacts by $60 trillion.”

If other impacts such as ocean acidification are factored in, the cost would be much higher. Some 80% of these costs will be borne by developing countries, as they experience more extreme weather, flooding, droughts and poorer health, as Arctic warming affects climate.

The research also explored the impact of a number of later, longer-lasting or smaller pulses of methane, and the authors write that, in all these cases, the economic cost for physical changes to the Arctic is “steep”.

The authors write that global economic institutions and world leaders should “kick-start investment in rigorous economic modelling” and consider the impacts of a changing Arctic landscape as far outweighing any “short-term gains from shipping and extraction”.

They argue that economic discussions today are missing the big picture on Arctic change. “Arctic science is a strategic asset for human economies because the region drives critical effects in our biophysical, political and economic systems,” write the academics. Neither the World Economic Forum nor the International Monetary Fund currently recognise the economic danger of Arctic change.

According to Whiteman, “Global leaders and the WEF and IMF need to pay much more attention to this invisible time-bomb. The mean impacts of just this one effect — $60 trillion — approaches the $70-trillion value of the world economy in 2012.”

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Gavin Schmidt says:

gavin_wadham_tweet

He goes on to say:

gavin_wadham_tweet2

Translation: bunk.

h/t to Dr. Ryan Maue

Related: this paper in Nature from the U.S. Geological Survey and Woods Hole last week:

Nature puts methane hydrate fears to rest – says it will be 1,000 years before they make any impact

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TomRude
July 25, 2013 7:55 am

Well that’s the whole thing: pay us half and consider yourself lucky…

July 25, 2013 8:15 am

fred says:
July 24, 2013 at 10:40 pm
“I am still waiting for Obama to balance the budget to save the planet.”
I nominate this the best comment on WUWT in weeks!! It’s funny and true. And a world of clowns is trying to put the US under (I’m not from the US, but I pray for them everyday, selfish slob that I am).

PeterB in Indianapolis
July 25, 2013 8:30 am

It must be news to Pete the Printer that Northern Hemisphere snow and ice tend to melt in Northern Hemisphere Summer. I guess they didn’t teach him that in school.

DirkH
July 25, 2013 8:32 am

Peter the Printer says:
July 25, 2013 at 6:34 am
“few if any of the commenters here have any science knowledge that would come close to Gavin Schmidt. In fact, added together it wouldn’t come close. Your group total IQ appears to be in the tens.”
So, why does the biggest scientific hero of all times, Gavin Schmidt, continue to fiddle the temperatures in the GISS temperature record upward?
( which he does: http://suyts.wordpress.com/2013/07/23/really-giss-dishonesty-continues-in-post-hansen-era/ )
Please, Peter, explain it to us ignoramuses. I really can’t think of any reason but personal greed.

Bruce Cobb
July 25, 2013 8:39 am

Sounds like petertheprinter needs to take his meds and go have a lie-down.

RT
July 25, 2013 9:01 am

Science fiction is so much better when it includes laser beams and time travel…

July 25, 2013 9:02 am

Peter the Printer says:
July 25, 2013 at 6:34 am
You might like to read this before you continue your ignorant mocking http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/capital-weather-gang/wp/2013/07/18/snow-and-arctic-ice-extent-plummet-suddenly-as-globe-bakes/
You are all ludicrous, intellectually challenged right wing nuts who just don’t want to give anything up. This is your hissy fit, and it’s most illuminating, since few if any of the commenters here have any science knowledge that would come close to Gavin Schmidt. In fact, added together it wouldn’t come close. Your group total IQ appears to be in the tens.

(1) No one is mocking Gavin Schmidt here. In fact, if you read Schmidt’s tweets, you should understand that he is mocking the Cambridge paper, citing their claim of trillions in damage as “Only under their implausible scenario. This is not a study about ongoing Arctic warming impacts.”
(2) You should have followed WaPo’s Capital Weather Gang this AM. Because what they just published comports with WUWT above.

Methane mayhem mischief: misleading commentary published in Nature
By Jason Samenow, Published: July 25 at 10:30 am
A catastrophic release of the potent greenhouse gas methane in the Arctic could cause a sudden warming with massive economic consequences says a commentary published in the esteemed scientific journal Nature Wednesday. Yet most everything known and published about methane indicates this scenario is very unlikely. This piece should never have been published without discussing this critical point.

RT
July 25, 2013 9:04 am

Peter, the previous four interglacial periods were so warm at their peak that the Arctic sea ice completely melted during the summer. You know what an interglacial period is right?

mwhite
July 25, 2013 10:46 am

What about this prediction
“Why Arctic sea ice will vanish in 2013”
http://www.sierraclub.ca/en/AdultDiscussionPlease
“By Paul Beckwith
On March 23, 2013, I made the following prediction:
“For the record—I do not think that any sea ice will survive this summer. An event unprecedented in human history is today, this very moment, transpiring in the Arctic Ocean.”
and there’s more
“My prediction above was based on understanding of the inter-related Artic/climatic system obtained through in-depth research conducted as part of my Ph.D. studies on abrupt climate change, and through my academic work as part-time professor in climatology/meteorology at the University of Ottawa”
Glad I don’t have to go to his lectures

Kajajuk
July 25, 2013 10:51 am

James at 48 says:
July 24, 2013 at 8:07 pm
—————————–
Exactly! where is the dramatic pictures of the sluicing Arctic? No imaging from satellites to expose the massive release of methane? Which would produce very large clouds!

DCA
July 25, 2013 2:05 pm

Is anybody keeping an eye on the Arctic rowers? Micheal Crichton’s State of Fear comes to mind.

July 25, 2013 9:08 pm

I have a kayak business. I’d not actually mind so much if the coast came closer and more water means more kayaks probably sold. Pity it is bulldust because if we could, I’d vote for it.

Kevin K.
July 25, 2013 9:46 pm

That was an entertaining read. I’m curious about $60 trillion. Why not $59 trillion? Did you account for inflation over the next 2 years? (sarc)
The guy who did the obedience training on my Siberian Husky said something like this: “If you want one thing and the dog another, the dog will act up and bark to get your attention. Ignore her. There will be a period of more barking and acting up that you have to keep ignoring until she accepts reality, quiets down, and behaves.”
This article? Woof woof. “Sharknado” is more believable.

Billy Liar
July 26, 2013 9:35 am

Peter the Printer says:
July 25, 2013 at 6:34 am
few if any of the commenters here have any science knowledge that would come close to Gavin Schmidt
Gavin Schmidt’s a mathematician. Whose IQ looks in the single digits now?

bill
July 30, 2013 8:23 pm

I wouldn’t worry about the ice melting to much, what is to happen will happen, the earth and the people on it are heading into Gods judgement and men cannot stop it, the thing to do is get ready for the return of Christ, everything else is the nonsense of man. God will translate us out of here to heaven while the rest of humanity with all the sins it has piled up to heaven will stand for judgement . their is nothing you and I could do and I wouldn’t want to interfere in gods judgement on mankind which it rightfully deserves. man has become filthy and depraved of mind and every filthy thing they dream up comes to be.

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