Experts warn gas pipes are in real danger from exploding tundra
Gas pipes supplying Europe run right over swelling Yamal tundra which is deeply unstable to the release of underground methane.
Russia’s leading expert on methane explosions on the tundra, Professor Vasily Bogoyavlensky, says to the Siberian Times that in some places swelling tundra jacks up gas pipes.
“In a number of areas pingos – we see both from satellite data and with own eyes during helicopter inspections – they literally prop up gas pipes,” says Professor Bogoyavlensky.
His analysis show gas pipelines running over the swelling tundra on the Yamal Peninsula. The region has Russia’s largest and most important natural gas fields and is key to supplying Europe.
The unstable tundra is due to the release of underground methane that had been frozen in permafrost, but is now thawing. Over the last three years, several methane explosions in the Yamal region have created huge craters, some 50 meters deep and tens of meters in diameter.
The Siberian Times points to one recent explosion where permafrost soil was thrown around 1 kilometre from the epicentre of the blast. Flames shot into the sky, and a 50 metre-deep crater was formed from the eruption, the newspaper reports.
It is a sharp warming of Arctic climate that causes the permafrost to melt.
Experts evaluating the recent findings say the risk of more explosions under gas supply pipelines “is clearly acute.”