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Will Southern Ocean carbon studies led by China, UK spur climate modelling rethink?

  • Paper by international team and another from China both suggest measures of Southern Ocean carbon sink may be wide of the mark

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The Southern Ocean, also known as the Antarctic, is crucial to the Earth’s climate as a primary carbon sink, mitigating increases in carbon emissions due to human activity. Photo: AFP
Studies by two separate research teams have identified discrepancies in estimates of the vital Southern Ocean carbon sink, highlighting what could be a significant gap in mainstream climate modelling.
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The Southern Ocean, also known as the Antarctic Ocean, is crucial to the Earth’s climate as one of its main carbon sinks.

Carbon sinks are areas that absorb more carbon dioxide than they release, and are vital to mitigating increases in carbon emissions due to human activity. The Southern Ocean accounts for around 40 per cent of global ocean uptake of anthropogenic greenhouse gases.

Despite the Southern Ocean’s importance as a carbon sink, there has long been uncertainty about its exact uptake, due to physical conditions like temperature variations and ice cover, as well as seasonally dependent measurement methods.

An international team from Britain, the United States, Germany and Belgium and another from China published new research papers last week taking a closer look at estimates of the region’s carbon sink capacity.

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Both papers indicated that widely used carbon mapping models could be inaccurate.

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