Scientists at 
 
the University of Colorado 
 
at Boulder's Cooperative 
 
Institute for Research in 
 
Environmental Sciences 
 
have for the first time 
 
quantified 
 
the amount of carbon 
 
that could be released 
 
into the atmosphere 
 
as the Arctic 
 
permafrost melts. 
 
Using computer modeling, 
 
the scientists showed that 
 
within about a decade, 
 
carbon dioxide 
 
and methane from the 
 
thawing plant material 
 
that has been frozen 
 
in soil since the last 
 
glacial period that ended 
 
about 12,000 years ago, 
 
will turn the entire 
 
Arctic tundra region into 
 
a global source of carbon, 
 
instead of remaining 
 
a carbon sink. 
 
Within a century,
 
the Arctic meltdown 
 
could release about 
 
95 billion tons of carbon, 
 
equivalent to half the 
 
total fossil fuel emissions 
 
since the beginning 
 
of the Industrial Age. 
 
Lead author, 
 
Dr. Kevin Schaefer noted 
 
that even the most 
 
conservative estimates 
 
from this projection 
 
would make 
 
a significant difference 
 
to the Earth's climate. 
 
He stated, “If we want to 
 
hit a target carbon dioxide 
 
concentration, 
 
then we have to reduce 
 
fossil fuel emissions… 
 
much lower 
 
than previously thought 
 
to account for 
 
this additional carbon 
 
from the permafrost. 
 
Otherwise we will end up 
 
with a warmer Earth 
 
than we want.” 
 
Our sincere thanks, 
 
Dr. Schaefer and 
 
University of Colorado 
 
colleagues for these 
 
revealing insights into 
 
the precarious situation 
 
of the Arctic permafrost. 
 
Let us join together 
 
in rapid measures 
 
to protect the planet and 
 
secure the survival of all 
 
co-inhabitants on Earth. 
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
 
has often 
 
highlighted the need for 
 
humanity to safeguard 
 
the ecosphere from 
 
potential sources of 
 
runaway global warming, 
 
as in this interview 
 
published in the 
 
September 2009 edition 
 
of The House Magazine.
 
Supreme Master Ching Hai : According to Dr. Hansen, 
 
our planet is 
 
on a dangerous course 
 
to passing irreversible 
 
tipping points with 
 
disastrous consequences. 
 
These you know already, 
 
 
 
 
 
like the melting of 
 
permafrost which in turn 
 
releases toxic methane 
 
gas, resulting 
 
in more warming 
 
of the atmosphere.
 
The reason scientists 
 
are now turning 
 
their attention to methane 
 
is that research 
 
has shown this gas has 
 
a heating capacity 100 times
 
greater than CO2 
 
within the first 5 years. 
 
The UN Food and 
 
Agriculture Organization 
 
states that livestock 
 
is the single largest 
 
human-caused source 
 
of methane 
 
and accounts for 37% 
 
of total greenhouse gases. 
 
Thus, if meat eating 
 
were to be halted, 
 
methane production 
 
from livestock would be 
 
minimized, and then, 
 
consequently 
 
all the methane from 
 
the permafrost will also 
 
be stopped, then 
 
we will still have time 
 
to handle the CO2. 
 
It's very logical, 
 
scientifically 
 
speaking and otherwise. 
 
So, being veg means 
 
saving our planet. 
http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/life/sci_tech/melting-permafrost-to-emit-carbon-equal-to-half-all-industrial-emissions-study-116341429.html,
 
http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2011/02/16/Thawing-permafrost-will-release-carbon/UPI-50631297893151/#ixzz1EGaejNw9