Tuesday, February 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Parts of tundra releasing more carbon than they absorb: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jan, 2025 10:58 AM
  • Parts of tundra releasing more carbon than they absorb: study

Parts of the Arctic tundra are now releasing more planet-warming gases than they absorb, an international study published Tuesday suggests, upending a millennia-old trend and raising concerns about a climate change feedback loop. 

The study, published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature Climate Change, said the change appeared to have taken place in "many tundra regions" and called it a "noteworthy shift in carbon dynamics."

Large swaths of the fast-warming Arctic are covered in continuously frozen ground, called permafrost, that in some cases has remained below 0 C for hundreds of thousands of years. Once it thaws, scientists warn long-dead plant matter can decompose and release massive amounts of planet-warming carbon dioxide and methane, generating a feedback loop that further contributes to global warming. 

The authors suggest one of the main drivers of the tundra's shift from CO2 absorber to emitter could be thawing permafrost, which covers almost half of Canada's land mass.

"This is not something we can or should ignore," said Sue Natali, a co-author of the study and senior scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center, a Massachusetts-based non-profit.

The study says the region comprised of the boreal forest and the Arctic increased how much carbon it can hold in its plants and soils from 2001 to 2020. The uptake appeared to take place at lower latitudes of the boreal forest, where warmer temperatures extended the growing season, Natali said. 

Still, about one-third of that area had become a net source of carbon dioxide, mostly in northern permafrost regions. When emissions from wildfires were accounted for, the authors suggested the Arctic-boreal zone, taken as a whole, no longer absorbed a statistically significant amount of carbon emissions.

Of the regions releasing more carbon than they absorb, the study suggests about 20 per cent are in Canada. 

While scientists have expected human-caused climate change to thaw permafrost and release CO2, Natali said it's surprising to already see signatures of that change.

"I think to be able to see it over such a large area – to detect it, to monitor it – is quite surprising, and it represents a shift in how this system is functioning," she said in an interview. 

"And how this system is functioning is important, both for folks who live on permafrost, but also because these greenhouse gas emissions have global implications."

The study notes the timing of the shift, from a carbon sink to source, is uncertain and may have started prior to 1990.

Human-caused climate change has already increased global temperatures, but that warming is happening several times faster in the Arctic, in part due to another feedback loop: melting sea ice. As sea ice melts, the exposed darker ocean water can absorb more heat, which causes more ice to melt and warms the planet. 

As the Arctic warms, permafrost thaws. A 2021 report by an international group of scientists suggested that on humanity's current emissions trajectory, thawing permafrost could release emissions by the end of the century on par with some of the biggest greenhouse-gas emitting nations, such as the United States and China.

Yet those emissions often go unaccounted for, Natali said. It could mean countries are underestimating how quickly they need to cut their direct emissions, such as from burning fossil fuels, in order to meet warming targets and avert some of climate change's most serious effects. 

"If you're not doing the math properly ... and you're ignoring permafrost emissions essentially the size of another nation, then you're not going to be able to stay well below two degrees Celsius or 1.5 degrees Celsius," she said. 

Research has found that thawing permafrost poses major direct risks to Arctic communities, including in Canada. 

Houses, roads, airstrips, communication towers and other infrastructure built on permafrost are at risk of collapse or erosion-related damage, a separate study published last week in Communications Earth and Environment says. 

Accelerating erosion rates in Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T., have already contributed to the need for planned home relocation, the study notes. 

Other risks identified by that study include a decrease in water quality, food insecurity, supply chain disruptions and exposure to infectious diseases and contaminants trapped in permafrost, including large amounts of mercury. 

The findings outlined in Tuesday's study underscored the importance of monitoring CO2 changes in the far north, where observation stations are limited, Natali said. 

"This is an amazing study because of the amount of data that went into it, but there's still so many gaps in our observation network for the north," she said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster
Vancouver Police say they arrested an armed man in Kitsilano who tried to hide from officers in a dumpster.  The Vancouver Police Department says officers used a police dog and a beanbag shotgun in the arrest of the man who had reportedly been in people's backyards in the area of the Arbutus greenway. 

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster

More cases of Avian flu in BC

More cases of Avian flu in BC
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says more cases of Avian flu have been detected in B-C. The agency says the virus was detected over the weekend at a commercial poultry property in Abbotsford.

More cases of Avian flu in BC

Police find human remains in burned SUV in Abbotsford park

Police find human remains in burned SUV in Abbotsford park
Police in Abbotsford are investigating after officers found what are believed to be human remains inside a vehicle that was set on fire in Sumas Mountain Regional Park. They say officers responded to a report of a vehicle fire on Friday around 2:45 p.m. along the Forest Service Road in the park and arrived to find the red 2014 Mitsubishi Outlander ablaze. 

Police find human remains in burned SUV in Abbotsford park

Surrey Police arrest driver after failing to stop at B.C. border crossing

Surrey Police arrest driver after failing to stop at B.C. border crossing
Police in Surrey say they arrested the driver of a vehicle with Washington state licence plates who failed to stop at the Pacific Highway border crossing Sunday.  The Surrey Police Service says the Canada Border Services Agency flagged a white pickup truck that drove through the border around 8:45 a.m. 

Surrey Police arrest driver after failing to stop at B.C. border crossing

Ferries in B.C. Kootenay region run 'as normal' after Labour Relations Board ruling

Ferries in B.C. Kootenay region run 'as normal' after Labour Relations Board ruling
The company that operates a cable ferry service in British Columbia's Kootenay region says sailings will be running as normal this week "and indefinitely." Western Pacific Marine says that comes after it applied for and received a stay from the province's Labour Relations Board of an earlier ruling that would have allowed expanded strike action on the free Kootenay Lake crossings. 

Ferries in B.C. Kootenay region run 'as normal' after Labour Relations Board ruling

Trudeau prorogues Parliament, will step down as prime minister after leadership race

Trudeau prorogues Parliament, will step down as prime minister after leadership race
A teary-eyed Trudeau told reporters outside Rideau Cottage, his official residence in Ottawa, on Monday that he reflected on his political future over the holidays and told his kids Sunday evening over dinner that he has decided it's time for him to move on.

Trudeau prorogues Parliament, will step down as prime minister after leadership race