Will the
Gulf Stream really collapse by 2025?
26 July 2023
https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-66289494
Georgina
Rannard
BBC Climate
& Science reporter
The Gulf
Stream system of warm ocean currents could collapse as early as 2025, a
scientific study has warned.
The end of
the system, which drives the Atlantic's currents and determines western
Europe's weather, would likely lead to lower temperatures and catastrophic
climate impacts.
But leading
scientists have reservations about the study and say it is not established
science.
It is far
from certain the system will shut down this century, they say.
The most
recent assessment by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded
that the system, known as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
(Amoc), would not collapse as quickly as the study has suggested.
The study's
author, Prof Peter Ditlevsen at the University of Copenhagen, told BBC News
that other scientists had warned about the potential collapse of the Amoc.
"There's
been worries that this current is weakening for as long as we have had
measurements of it - since 2004," he said.
The Amoc is
a complicated set of currents that bring warm water north towards the pole,
where it cools and sinks.
But as
global temperatures rise with global warming, fresh water is pouring into the
Amoc from the melting Greenland ice cap and other sources.
If it
collapses, it could lower temperatures by up to 10 or 15 degrees in Europe and
lead to rising sea levels in the eastern US. It would also disrupt rain that
billions rely on for agriculture.
The last
time Amoc stopped and restarted was during the Ice Ages about 115,000 to 12,000
years ago.
The new
study, published in Nature Communications, used sea surface temperature data
stretching back to 1870 as a way of assessing the change in strength of Amoc
currents over time.
It estimates
Amoc could collapse between 2025 and 2095.
The analysis
is based on greenhouse gas emissions rising in the same way as they have done
thus far. If emissions started to reduce, the world would have more time to
keep temperatures below the point at which Amoc would, potentially, collapse.
'Scepticism'
However,
scientists including Ben Booth at the Met Office Hadley Centre say the paper's
conclusions "are far from settled science".
"We
just don't have the evidence to state that it has declined," says Prof
Penny Holliday at the National Oceanography Centre.
"We
know that there is a possibility that Amoc could stop what it's doing now at
some point, but it's really hard to have certainty about that," she says.
"If my
neighbour asked me if I should worry about heatwaves or the Amoc collapse, I'd
say worry about temperatures. We know that is already happening and will get
worse," she said.
The reasons
for many scientists' reservations is that they say the study's authors made a
series of assumptions about how to understand Amoc.
But the
climate system is extremely complex and experts do not have all the evidence
they need to fully understand the Amoc.
The
predictions that it could collapse as early as 2025 or by 2095 should be taken
with a large grain of salt, says Jon Robson at the National Centre for
Atmospheric Science, University of Reading.
But It does
not mean that the study is not important, or that the possibility of Amoc
shutting down should be dismissed, they say.
"We do
still have to take the idea seriously that there could be abrupt changes in the
North Atlantic climate system," says Prof Robson.
"But
the exact predictions that it will happen - and within this time frame - you
have to take that with some scepticism," he adds.
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