Cows. Sounds good from the denialists point of view doesn't it... Until we work out there are around 26 million cars in the UK and 1.76 million cows. That also doesn't include trucks, busses, trains and coastal ships...
methane clathrates... constitute some 35,000 Billion Tonnes of CO2 (equivalent), locked up in the sea bed. The two figures have no comparison. Whilst cows and methane from tips are human created situations over the last 5,000 years, methane clathrates are geological formations which have been building for millions of years. Ever since the ice ages started in fact.
Human global warming is happening so fast that it is causing localised warming and impacts many times the normal effect of that warming. When you warm up 1.5C in 200 years instead of 15,000 years, then some parts of the system get overheated. A bit like firing up a blowtorch in a room and playing it on a sheet of metal. The overall impact, after, say, an hour, is that the entire room will be 1c or so warmer. The sheet of metal, on the other hand, is white hot or melted.
This is what the scientists are looking at.
Granted we won't see 35 gigatonnes of CO2e (co2 equivalent), of methane unlocked in a year or a decade or a century. The point is we don't need to. The impact of methane, locally, is 75 times that of CO2 in the first 5 years. One massive methane event in the Arctic is enough to empty the arctic of ice for a decade.
Whilst I accept that the
clathrate gun hypothesis is unlikely in it's pure form, the reason the Oden is out there now is to see if the beginnings of the hypothesis have any factual basis.
It's looking like there is factual basis. The clathrates in the Arctic are only part of the picture. Bog methane from frozen bogs is already bubbling out from the tundra at ever increasing rates. Scientists have done tests, boring a hole in the ice over a bog pond then lighting the methane. There's got to be something eerie about a hole in the ice over water creating a yellow flame.
Just like climate change itself, these surveys are just the very first beginnings of human exploration into the changes happening under the ice cap and on the sea bed in the methane clathrate balance. I'm sure it will be far, far too late when we finally have the analyses which prove beyond an unreasonable doubt that it is all happening.