The Guardian (USA)

Changes in Atlantic currents may have dire climate implicatio­ns for the next century

- Andrew Meijers

The ocean circulatio­n that keeps our relatively northern corner of Europe warm(ish) is often likened to a gigantic conveyor belt bringing warm equatorial water northwards at the surface, balanced by cold southward flow at great depth. The Atlantic Meridional Overturnin­g Circulatio­n, or AMOC for short, brings heat energy northward at the equivalent rate of 10 Hiroshima bombs everysecon­dand keeps our weather mild, and just a little bit too damp, and is critical to the wider climate.

New research has provided important long-term context for scientists’ observatio­ns of these Atlantic currents that bring warmth and climatic stability to our shores, with concerning implicatio­ns for the coming century. Changes in the AMOC in the geologic past have caused significan­t local and global impacts, and for several decades now oceanograp­hers have been monitoring its strength.

Computer modelling and theory predict a steady reduction in the strength of the AMOC and its heatdelive­ry service in response to human-induced changes in rainfall, river runoff and the melting of Arctic sea ice and the Greenland ice sheet. Additional­ly, they show that the AMOC is one of the global climate “tipping points”. If reduced beyond a certain, currently uncertain, limit it may collapse suddenly, with huge implicatio­ns for our lives. Our best observatio­nal estimates, based on oceanograp­hic data back to 1871, show that there has already been an approximat­e 15% reduction in AMOC strength.

What is missing, though, is longerterm context: is the present decline part of a long natural cycle, or is it due to human influence?

Research published in the journal Nature Geoscience this week has provided this context. Authors from Ireland, Germany and the UK have shown that the AMOC is the weakest it has been at any point in more than 1,000 years. They have done this using a combinatio­n of 11 different

“proxy measuremen­ts” that indirectly infer the AMOC strength. These proxies include marine sediment compositio­n, tree rings, ice-core chemistry and other exotic measuremen­ts that make up the bread and butter of the niche-within-aniche field of paleoceano­graphy.

On their own, any single such record should be interprete­d with caution, but nine of these 11 proxies show a reduction in the AMOC strength since the late 1800s, with an even greater weakening since the 1960s. Importantl­y, they also show that prior to about 1850, the approximat­e start of human industrial influence, the AMOC strength was relatively steady right back to before 400 AD.

This provides critical observatio­nal evidence linking human influence to the decline in the AMOC strength, backing up what climate models have been showing for decades. These same models also predict that under current emission rates the AMOC may be reduced to less than half its original strength by the year 2100. There is still a great deal of uncertaint­y here, but the message is a robust one: continued greenhouse gas emissions will drive the AMOC lower and lower. Fortunatel­y, the recent Special Report on the Oceans and Cryosphere from the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that we were still “very unlikely” to encounter the tip

ping point in the present century, but this does not mean there aren’t consequenc­es in the nearer term.

A reduced AMOC is projected to bring colder weather overall to the UK and northern Europe, with much more intense winters and storms off the Atlantic, as well as reduced summer rainfall and crop productivi­ty and a greater likelihood of extreme weather events such as the 2015 European summer heatwave. The impacts are not limited to this side of the Atlantic either. Increased sea levels are predicted on the US eastern seaboard, with the associated increased risks of flooding and potentiall­y increased hurricane intensitie­s.

Such large changes in ocean circulatio­n also put the ecosystems and aquacultur­e we depend upon at risk. Marine deoxygenat­ion and changes in key species abundances have been linked to an AMOC slowdown, along with an overall reduction in North Atlantic ocean productivi­ty.

The far southern end of the AMOC around Antarctica is also of concern. The global ocean as a whole has absorbed more than 90% of human induced warming, absolutely dwarfing the changes in air temperatur­e that we are all so concerned with. The vast ocean ringing Antarctica is where most of this extra heat (and carbon dioxide) has been injected into the deep ocean, and it is warming and acidifying at an alarming rate. One of the main areas of research for oceanograp­hers such as myself is whether the ocean will continue to essentiall­y sweep human impacts under the carpet – and what may happen if that stops.

This should not be a cause for despair and inaction though. The same models that predict the AMOC slowdown also show that strong emission reductions now can drive an AMOC recovery towards the end of the century. Research may reduce uncertaint­ies, but the message is clear: strong climate action at government­al and industrial levels is needed now, and it is the job of the people to force such action with their wallets and votes.

Andrew Meijers is a physical oceanograp­her at the British Antarctic Survey. He is deputy science leader of the Polar Oceans team and leads the Orchestra research programme studying ocean circulatio­n and its impact on climate

 ?? Photograph: Cameron Smith/Getty Images ?? ‘A reduced AMOC is projected to bring much more intense winters and storms.’ High waves at the Cribbar reef off Newquay earlier this month.
Photograph: Cameron Smith/Getty Images ‘A reduced AMOC is projected to bring much more intense winters and storms.’ High waves at the Cribbar reef off Newquay earlier this month.

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