US
 researchers now estimate climate change is accelerating the likely melt
 of frozen, deep-sea methane hydrates, leading to the potential 
discharge of an overwhelming 16,000 metric tons of methane annually. 
Although
 the methane would initially be consumed by marine microbes, these would
 release CO2 with a resulting imbalance that could result in numerous 
dead zones, where the water would lose as much as 95% of its 
life-sustaining oxygen. 
In addition, the microbial production of
 CO2 would increase ocean acidity, jeopardizing the survival of many 
species and disrupting marine ecosystems. As a further side effect, key 
nutrients such as nitrate, copper and iron that are useful to organisms 
would also be depleted due to the activity of the microbes. 
Experts
 have detected large seafloor methane stores beneath waters throughout 
the Arctic as well as in the North Pacific Oceans, with some lakes and 
seas already showing the bubbling of methane plumes and similar 
microbial processes. 
Study co-author Dr. Scott M. Elliot, a 
marine biogeochemist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New 
Mexico, USA, stated, “This will be a truly big environmental pollution 
problem in the next few decades. 
This problem is not going to go away.” 
Our
 appreciation, Dr. Elliot and colleagues, for alerting us to this 
destructive scenario being formed beneath our oceans. Let us quickly 
adopt more sustainable lifestyles to avoid such dire outcomes to the 
planet. 
During a September 2008 interview on the US-based 
Environmentally Sound Radio, Supreme Master Ching Hai addressed the 
threat of methane release in the context of global warming, while 
highlighting the way for human prevention.
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 You look all that and you see already because the methane gas and 
hydrogen sulfide are resulted from animal raising, and that produces a 
lot of toxic gas into the air and it warms the atmosphere, and then the 
atmosphere melts the ice and the ocean will be warm, and then more 
methane and other toxins will be released from the bottom of the ocean 
and permafrost and all that. And then it will be like a devil’s circle. I
 hope we stop it quick. 
If we do not do anything, then we will 
go to the point of no return. But luckily, because due to many new 
vegetarian people joining the vegetarian diet, now we have delayed the 
point of no return.
 http://www.sciencenews.org/view/generic/id/60831/title/Methane_releases_in_arctic_seas_could_wreak_devastation