"KODIAK ISLAND, Alaska -- Billions of tons of carbon are buried in the frozen Arctic tundra, now heating up because of human-caused climate change. To measure which greenhouse gases are being released and in what quantities, government scientists are flying instrument-laden planes over the tundra from now through November.
They say recent observations indicate that the air above Alaska 'may already hold the first signs of a regional increase in greenhouse gas emissions' that could contribute to global climate change.
'Recent observations could be isolated cases or part of a vast regional change in emissions that could accelerate climate warming to a more dangerous pace. We don't know yet,' said Colm Sweeney, of NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in Boulder, Colorado. 'We're eager to find out.'
Sweeney heads a NOAA aircraft project that samples greenhouse gases around the country. In addition, the lab monitors the gases from 60 sites worldwide."
Environment News Service had the story August 24, 2009.
"Scientists Detect Greenhouse Gas Buildup Over Alaska"
Source: ENS, 08/27/2009