I
have been aware of this possibility since 2003
Ocean
current sends out chilling warning
8
January, 2017
LONDON,
8 January, 2017 –
Here is the long-term weather forecast for the North Atlantic, in a
world in which carbon dioxide concentrations in the atmosphere
double: a powerful
ocean current called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
(AMOC) will continue to weaken, and
then collapse.
This
is the ocean current that takes tropic heat northward, and then grows
cold, dives to the ocean floor, and runs southward. And it is the
current that delivers the heat that, for example, keeps the British
Isles 5°C warmer than their latitude might dictate.
Carbon
dioxide absorbs heat reflected from the rocks. And the more carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere, the warmer the planet will become.
For
two centuries, humans have been burning fossil fuels and putting
ancient carbon back into the atmosphere. The average planetary
temperatures, so far, have climbed about 1°C.
If
CO2 levels double, temperatures will climb a lot higher. For the
first 300 years after the carbon dioxide doubling, nothing much will
happen. But then there will be a sweeping drop in temperatures over
the north Atlantic.
New climate models
The
rain belt will migrate south over the tropical ocean, the sea ice
will expand to cover the waters to the south of Greenland, and around
Iceland and Norway, and Britain and parts of northern Europe will
become much colder.
That
is what a new climate model predicts. Scientists from the Scripps
Institution of Oceanography,
US, and colleagues report
in Science Advances journal that
the outcome depends on just how computer simulations are framed.
At
the moment, the standard climate models predict that the paradox of a
colder Europe in a warmer world won’t happen. But the new analysis,
the authors say, corrects for biases that predict only moderate
changes in what climate scientists call the “Ocean Conveyor”.
“Prominent
cooling over the northern
North Atlantic and neighbouring areas
. . .
has enormous implications for regional
and global
climate change”
And
their corrected version suggests a much more apocalyptic outcome: a
slow-burning horror story of fire and ice.
“In
current models, AMOC is systematically biased to be in a stable
regime,” says the study’s lead author, Wei Liu, a Yale
University postdoctoral
associate who began his research as a graduate student at
the University
of Wisconsin-Madison and
continued it at Scripps Institution of Oceanography.
“A
bias-corrected model predicts a future AMOC collapse with prominent
cooling over the northern North Atlantic and neighbouring areas. This
has enormous implications for regional and global climate change.”
This
is the scenario painted luridly in the 2004 disaster movie, The Day
After Tomorrow. Although the film is science fiction, scientists have
been worrying about the stability of the Ocean Conveyor for at least
a decade. The Arctic
is warming rapidly,
and the consequences for the continents to the south may not be
comfortable.
Ocean current weakening
Researchers
have offered tentative
evidence that the Atlantic ocean current could be weakening.
There have been warnings
in two studies that Europe,
in particular, could see a drop in temperatures.
Right
now, outcomes remain speculative, and there are many more factors to
be considered. Even in the worst case scenario, the Atlantic ocean
current shutdown will not happen for several hundred years.
What
the new research really says is that what the computer models predict
depends very much on how the data are presented.
Or,
in the words of the four authors: “Our results highlight the need
to develop dynamical metrics to constrain models and the importance
of reducing model biases in long-term climate projections.”
– Climate
News Network
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