![]() |
| Lakes are large sources of methane. Photo Credit:Monica Westman |
Emissions of the greenhouse gas methane from lakes and reservoirs risk doubling by the end of the century due to climate change according to a new study from Linköping University, Sweden, and NASA Ames Research Center in the US. This in turn could raise Earth’s temperature more than suggested by the UN climate panel IPCC’s current worst-case scenario.
“This study makes it even clearer that we really, really want to change the climate scenario as quickly as possible. The future will be very uncertain if we don’t,” says Professor David Bastviken at Linköping University.
Lakes and water reservoirs are some of the largest sources of methane on Earth. The methane emitted is largely formed as microorganisms decompose organic matter in oxygen-free environments. Before industrialization, natural methane emissions to the atmosphere were in balance with the methane breakdown processes. If the ongoing climate change disturbs the natural balance causing emissions to increase, global warming is at risk of worsening.
_MoreDetail-v3_x2_1480x986.jpg)



.jpg)

.jpg)


