| Oceans Absorbing Less CO2 May Have 1,500 Year Impact 
    
 AUSTRIA: April 17, 2008
 
 
 VIENNA - Global oceans are soaking up less carbon dioxide, a development 
    that could speed up the greenhouse effect and have an impact for the next 
    1,500 years, scientists said on Wednesday.
 
 
 Research from a five-year project funded by the European Union showed the 
    North Atlantic, which along with the Antarctic is of the world's two vital 
    ocean carbon sinks, is absorbing only half the amount of CO2 that it did in 
    the mid-1990s.
 
 Using recent detailed data, scientists said the amount absorbed is also 
    fluctuating each year, making it hard to predict how and whether the trend 
    will continue and if oceans will be able to perform their vital balancing 
    act in the future.
 
 Oceans soak up around a quarter of annual CO2 emissions, but should they 
    fail to do so in the future the gas would stay in the atmosphere and could 
    accelerate the greenhouse effect, a prospect project director Christoph 
    Heinze called "alarming".
 
 Oceans are like a "slow-mixing machine". Carbon absorbed in the North 
    Atlantic takes around 1,500 years to circulate around the world's seas. This 
    means changes to their fragile balance could be felt long into the future, 
    Heinze said at a geoscience conference in Vienna.
 
 Scientists are still debating the reasons why oceans are absorbing less 
    carbon dioxide. While some point to CO2 saturation, others say it could be 
    caused by a change in surface water circulation, triggered by changes in 
    weather cycles.
 
 Heinze described a "bottleneck effect" because of the large amount of 
    manmade carbon dioxide oceans already store.
 
 "The more CO2 the oceans store, the more difficult it will be for them to 
    take up the additional load from the atmosphere and carbon absorption will 
    stagnate even further," Heinze said.
 
 Some forms of sea life have suffered from the large amounts of CO2 absorbed, 
    because of changes in acidity levels.
 
 "The seafloor is becoming an increasingly hostile environment," said Marion 
    Gehlen, from the Laboratory of Climate and Environment Science in France.
 
 "This corrosive water means mollusc organisms have a hard time making their 
    shells and eventually they might not be able to do it at all."
 
 For the scientists there is only one thing humans can do to resolve the 
    problem -- reduce emissions by at least 75 percent.
 
 "We must act now. The good news is that while the negative effects can last 
    a long time, the good things we do will also have an effect for the next 
    1,500 years," Heinze said.
 
 "It's cheap and it's possible to do this but people must have the will to do 
    it."
 
 
 Story by Sylvia Westall
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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