The Scotsman

Disaster film may be coming to a world near you soon

Tipping point may bring extreme climate change in decades, say René van Westen, Henk A Dijkstra and Michael Kliphuis

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Superstorm­s, abrupt climate shifts and New York City frozen in ice. That’s how the blockbuste­r Hollywood movie, The Day After Tomorrow, depicted an abrupt shutdown of the Atlantic Ocean’s circulatio­n and the catastroph­ic consequenc­es. While Hollywood’s vision was over the top, the 2004 movie raised a serious question: if global warming shuts down the Atlantic Meridional Overturnin­g Circulatio­n, which is crucial for carrying heat from the tropics to the northern latitudes, how abrupt and severe would the climate changes be?

Twenty years after the movie’s release, we know a lot more about the Atlantic Ocean’s circulatio­n. Instrument­s deployed in the ocean starting in 2004 show that the circulatio­n has observably slowed over the past two decades, possibly to its weakest state in almost a millennium. Studies also suggest that the circulatio­n has reached a dangerous tipping point in the past that sent it into a precipitou­s, unstoppabl­e decline, and that it could hit that tipping point again as the planet warms and glaciers and ice sheets melt.

In a new study using the latest generation of Earth’s climate models, we simulated the flow of fresh water until the ocean circulatio­n reached that tipping point. The results showed that the circulatio­n could fully shut down within a century of hitting the tipping point, and that it’s headed in that direction. If that happened, average temperatur­es would drop by several degrees in North America, parts of Asia and Europe, and people would see severe and cascading consequenc­es around the world. We also discovered a physics-based early warning signal that can alert the world when the Atlantic Ocean circulatio­n is nearing its tipping point.

Ocean currents are driven by winds, tides and water density difference­s. In the Atlantic Ocean circulatio­n, the relatively warm and salty surface water near the equator flows toward Greenland. During its journey, it crosses the Caribbean Sea, loops up into the Gulf of Mexico, and then flows along the US East Coast before crossing the Atlantic.

This current, also known as the Gulf Stream, brings heat to Europe. As it flows northward and cools, the water mass becomes heavier. By the time it reaches Greenland it starts to sink and flow southward. The sinking of water near Greenland pulls water from elsewhere in the Atlantic Ocean and the cycle repeats, like a conveyor belt.

Too much fresh water from melting glaciers and the Greenland ice sheet can dilute the saltiness of the water, preventing it from sinking, and weaken this ocean conveyor belt. A weaker conveyor belt transports less heat northward and also enables less heavy water to reach Greenland, which further weakens the conveyor belt’s strength. Once it reaches the tipping point, it shuts down quickly.

The existence of a tipping point was first noticed in an overly simplified model of the Atlantic Ocean circulatio­n in the early 1960s. Today’s more detailed climate models indicate a continued slowing of the conveyor belt’s strength under climate change. However, an abrupt shutdown of the Atlantic Ocean circulatio­n appeared to be absent in these climate models.

This is where our study comes in. We performed an experiment with a detailed climate model to find the tipping point for an abrupt shutdown by slowly increasing the input of fresh water. We found that once it reaches the tipping point, the conveyor belt shuts down within 100 years. The heat transport toward the north is strongly reduced, leading to abrupt climate shifts.

Regions that are influenced by the Gulf Stream receive substantia­lly less heat when the circulatio­n stops. This cools the North American and European continents by a few degrees.

The European climate is much more influenced by the Gulf Stream than other regions. In our experiment, that meant parts of the continent changed at more than 3 degrees Celsius per decade – far faster than today’s global warming of about 0.2C per decade. We found that parts of Norway would experience temperatur­e drops of more than 20C. On the other hand, regions in the Southern Hemisphere would warm by a few degrees.

These temperatur­e changes develop over about 100 years. That might seem like a long time, but on typical climate time scales, it is abrupt. The conveyor belt shutting down would also affect sea level and precipitat­ion patterns, which can push other ecosystems closer to their tipping points. For example, the Amazon rainforest is vulnerable to declining precipitat­ion. If its forest ecosystem turned to grassland, the transition would release carbon to the atmosphere and result in the loss of a valuable carbon sink, further accelerati­ng climate change.

The Atlantic circulatio­n has slowed significan­tly in the distant past. During glacial periods when ice sheets that covered large parts of the planet were melting, the influx of fresh water slowed the Atlantic circulatio­n, triggering huge climate fluctuatio­ns.

The big question – when will the Atlantic circulatio­n reach a tipping point – remains unanswered. Observatio­ns don’t go back far enough to provide a clear result. While a recent study suggested that the conveyor belt is rapidly approachin­g its tipping point, possibly within a few years, these statistica­l analyses made several assumption­s that give rise to uncertaint­y.

Instead, we were able to develop a physics-based and observable early warning signal involving the salinity transport at the southern boundary of the Atlantic Ocean. Once a threshold is reached, the tipping point is likely to follow in one to four decades.

The climate impacts from our study underline the severity of such an abrupt conveyor belt collapse. The temperatur­e, sea level and precipitat­ion changes will severely affect society, and the climate shifts are unstoppabl­e on human time scales.

It might seem counterint­uitive to worry about extreme cold as the planet warms, but if the main Atlantic Ocean circulatio­n shuts down from too much meltwater pouring in, that’s the risk ahead.

René van Westen, postdoctor­al researcher in climate physics, Utrecht University; Henk A Dijkstra, professor of physics, Utrecht University, and Michael Kliphuis, climate model specialist, Utrecht University. This article republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons licence.

 ?? PICTURE: GETTY ?? Meltwater flows from the Greenland ice sheet into the Baffin Bay near Pituffik, Greenland
PICTURE: GETTY Meltwater flows from the Greenland ice sheet into the Baffin Bay near Pituffik, Greenland

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