Why in the news?
- A new study warns that the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) could reach an irreversible tipping point within decades, with its collapse likely in 50–100 years.
Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)
- What is it?
- It is a large system of ocean currents in the Atlantic Ocean, part of the global Thermohaline Circulation (also called the “Global Conveyor Belt”).
- AMOC transports warm, salty surface water northward and cold, deep water southward.
- How it works?
- Warm surface water flows from the tropics to the North Atlantic (e.g., Gulf Stream).
- In the North Atlantic, the water cools and sinks due to increasing density (from cooling and salinity).
- The cold, dense water flows southward at deep ocean levels.
- Eventually, it upwells in the Southern Ocean and elsewhere, completing the circulation loop.
- Importance of AMOC
- Regulates climate in the North Atlantic region (e.g., Europe’s relatively mild winters).
- Helps in carbon sequestration (draws down CO₂ into the deep ocean).
- Supports marine ecosystems and fisheries by nutrient cycling.
- Impacts monsoon systems including Indian and West African monsoons.
- Evidence of Slowdown:
- Scientific studies and IPCC reports indicate AMOC has weakened by ~15% since the mid-20th century.
- May be at its weakest in over a millennium (based on proxy data).
- Causes:
- Global warming: Melting of Greenland ice adds freshwater, reducing salinity and density- disrupting the sinking process.
- Increased precipitation and Arctic ice melt contribute to surface freshening.
- Consequences:
- Cooling in Europe, especially in Northwestern Europe.
- Disruption of monsoons (especially Indian and Sahelian).
- Sea-level rise along North American coasts.
- Collapse of fisheries due to changes in nutrient upwelling.
- Risk of a tipping point leading to abrupt climate changes.