Abstract
Large amounts of carbon are stored in the permafrost of the northern high latitude land. As permafrost degrades under a warming climate, some of this carbon will decompose and be released to the atmosphere. This positive climate-carbon feedback will reduce the natural carbon sinks and thus lower anthropogenic CO2 emissions compatible with the goals of the Paris Agreement. Simulations using an ensemble of the JULES-IMOGEN intermediate complexity climate model (including climate response and process uncertainty) and a stabilization target of 2 °C, show that including the permafrost carbon pool in the model increases the land carbon emissions at stabilization by between 0.09 and 0.19 Gt C year−1 (10th to 90th percentile). These emissions are only slightly reduced to between 0.08 and 0.16 Gt C year−1 (10th to 90th percentile) when considering 1.5 °C stabilization targets. This suggests that uncertainties caused by the differences in stabilization target are small compared with those associated with model parameterisation uncertainty. Inertia means that permafrost carbon loss may continue for many years after anthropogenic emissions have stabilized. Simulations suggest that between 225 and 345 Gt C (10th to 90th percentile) are in thawed permafrost and may eventually be released to the atmosphere for stabilization target of 2 °C. This value is 60–100 Gt C less for a 1.5 °C target. The inclusion of permafrost carbon will add to the demands on negative emission technologies which are already present in most low emissions scenarios.
Highlights
Northern high latitude permafrost soils contain large amounts of relatively inert soil carbon (Hugelius et al 2014)
Simulations using an ensemble of the JULES-IMOGEN intermediate complexity climate model and a stabilization target of 2 ◦C, show that including the permafrost carbon pool in the model increases the land carbon emissions at stabilization by between 0.09 and 0.19 Gt C year−1 (10th to 90th percentile)
Under increased temperatures associated with anthropogenic burning of fossil fuels, permafrost will degrade and a proportion of the old inert carbon present will become vulnerable to decomposition
Summary
Northern high latitude permafrost soils contain large amounts of relatively inert soil carbon (Hugelius et al 2014). Under increased temperatures associated with anthropogenic burning of fossil fuels, permafrost will degrade and a proportion of the old inert carbon present will become vulnerable to decomposition This will cause a release of carbon dioxide (CO2) into the climate system. Burke et al (2017b) carried out a systematic uncertainty analysis of this feedback and showed the additional warming from the permafrost carbon feedback under the RCP2.6 strong mitigation scenario is between 4% and 18% of the change in the global mean temperature (ΔT). This range reflects differences in land surface models and climate response
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