A violent volcanic eruption may have revealed a new weapon to tackle a potent planet-heating gas

CNN

A violent volcanic eruption may have revealed a new weapon to tackle a potent planet-heating gas

Laura Paddison, CNN
4 min read

When an underwater volcano erupted in the South Pacific in January 2022, it sent a plume of ash, steam and gas nearly 40 miles above the Earth’s surface. It was one of the most violent volcanic eruptions of modern times. It may also have also revealed a new weapon in the fight against a potent planet-heating gas, according to new research.

The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano erupted with a power hundreds of times stronger than the Hiroshima nuclear explosion, setting off a tsunami and a sonic boom that went around the planet twice. It then did something “unexpected,” according to the authors of the new study published Thursday in the journal Nature Communications. It started cleaning up some of its own pollution.

The scientists’ discovery came from looking at advanced satellite data of the eruption. “We found a huge cloud of formaldehyde that should normally not be there,” said Maarten van Herpen, a study author, and a physicist and executive director at Acacia Impact Innovation, a Dutch consultancy. Formaldehyde often forms when methane, a potent planet-heating gas, is destroyed in the atmosphere.

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The researchers believed they were observing a chemical process that had previously been identified over the Atlantic Ocean.

Scientists had found that when Saharan dust is blown over the Atlantic, it mixes with salt spray and forms small iron-based particles. As the sunlight hits them, it produces chlorine atoms, which react with methane in the atmosphere and help break it down.

Something similar appears to have happened with the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volcano, according to the study. Its eruption sent enough salty water vapor into the stratosphere to fill around 58,000 Olympic-size swimming pools along with volcanic ash. The study scientists believe that when the sunlight hit the mixture, chlorine formed and broke down some of the methane produced by the eruption.

“It has emitted methane and then destroyed these emissions through the particles in the plume,” van Herpen said.

A satellite image of the eruption, which sent a plume of ash, steam and gas nearly 40 miles into the stratosphere. - Japan Meteorology Agency via AP
A satellite image of the eruption, which sent a plume of ash, steam and gas nearly 40 miles into the stratosphere. – Japan Meteorology Agency via AP

They tracked the formaldehyde cloud for 10 days. “Because formaldehyde only exists for a few hours, this showed that the cloud must have been destroying methane continuously for more than a week,” van Herpen added.

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The researchers estimate the eruption produced around 330,000 tons of methane, of which around 900 tons were broken down a day.

It’s “new — and completely surprising” that the same process observed in the Atlantic appears to have played out in a volcanic plume high up in the stratosphere, said Matthew Johnson a study author and chemistry professor at the University of Copenhagen, who was involved in the 2023 discovery.