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Ocean currents vital for distributing heat could collapse by midcentury, study says

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A further slowdown or complete halting of the circulation could create more extreme weather in the Northern Hemisphere, sea-level rise on the East Coast of the United States and drought for millions in southern Africa, scientists in Germany and the US have said. But the timing is uncertain.

In the new study, Peter and Susanne Ditlevsen, two researchers from Denmark, analysed sea surface temperatures in the North Atlantic between 1870 and 2020 as a proxy, meaning a way of assessing, this circulation.

They found the system could collapse as soon as 2025 and as late as 2095, given current global greenhouse gas emissions.

This diverges from the prediction made by the Intergovernmental Panel of Climate Change in 2021, which said the collapse isn’t likely to occur this century.

“There are large uncertainties in this study, in many prior studies, and in climate impact assessment overall, and scientists sometimes miss important aspects that can lead to both over and underprediction of impacts,” Julio Friedmann, chief scientist at Carbon Direct, a carbon management company, said in a statement.

“Still, the conclusion is obvious: Action must be swift and profound to counter major climate risks.”

Stefan Rahmstorf, co-author of a 2018 study on the subject, published an extensive analysis of Ditlevesen’s study on RealClimate, a website that publishes commentary from climate scientists.

While he said that a tipping point for the collapse of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation is “highly uncertain”, he also called the IPCC estimate conservative.

“Increasingly the evidence points to the risk being far greater than 10 per cent during this century,” he wrote, “… rather worrying for the next few decades.”

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