The usual suspects, such as BBC, the Guardian, New York Times, Washington Post etc., are reporting that the Atlantic gulf stream is slowing down due to climate change, threatening an ice age.
That’s right, warmists are now claiming fossil fuels do cooling when they are not warming. As usual, the headlines are not supported by the details.
The AMOC is back in the news following a recent Ocean Sciences meeting. This update adds to the theme Oceans Make Climate.
Background links are at the end, including one where chief alarmist Michael Mann claims fossil fuel use will stop the ocean conveyor belt and bring a new ice age.
Actual scientists are working away methodically on this part of the climate system, and are more level-headed.
H/T GWPF for noticing the recent article in Science Ocean array alters view of Atlantic ‘conveyor belt’ By Katherine Kornei Feb. 17, 2018.
Excerpts with my bolds:
The powerful currents in the Atlantic, formally known as the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC), are a major engine in Earth’s climate.
The AMOC’s shallower limbs—which include the Gulf Stream—transport warm water from the tropics northward, warming Western Europe.
In the north, the waters cool and sink, forming deeper limbs that transport the cold water back south—and sequester anthropogenic carbon in the process.
This overturning is why the AMOC is sometimes called the Atlantic conveyor belt.
The observations reveal unexpected eddies and strong variability in the AMOC currents.
They also show that the currents east of Greenland contribute the most to the total AMOC flow. Climate models, on the other hand, have emphasized the currents west of Greenland in the Labrador Sea.
“We’re showing the shortcomings of climate models,” says Susan Lozier, a physical oceanographer at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, who leads the $35-million seven-nation project known as the Overturning in the Subpolar North Atlantic Program (OSNAP).
For decades oceanographers have assumed the AMOC to be highly susceptible to changes in the production of deep waters at high latitudes in the North Atlantic.
A new ocean observing system is now in place that will test that assumption.
Early results from the OSNAP observational program reveal the complexity of the velocity field across the section and the dramatic increase in convective activity during the 2014/15 winter.
Early results from the gliders that survey the eastern portion of the OSNAP line have illustrated the importance of these measurements for estimating meridional heat fluxes and for studying the evolution of Subpolar Mode Waters.
Finally, numerical modeling data have been used to demonstrate the efficacy of a proxy AMOC measure based on a broader set of observational data, and an adjoint modeling approach has shown that measurements in the OSNAP region will aid our mechanistic understanding of the low-frequency variability of the AMOC in the subtropical North Atlantic.
Current observational efforts to assess AMOC variability in the North Atlantic.
The U.K.–U.S. Rapid Climate Change–Meridional Overturning Circulation and Heatflux Array (RAPID–MOCHA) program at 26°N successfully measures the AMOC in the subtropical North Atlantic via a trans-basin observing system (Cunningham et al. 2007; Kanzow et al. 2007; McCarthy et al. 2015).
While this array has fundamentally altered the community’s view of the AMOC, modeling studies over the past few years have suggested that AMOC fluctuations on interannual time scales are coherent only over limited meridional distances.
In particular, a breakpoint in coherence may occur at the subpolar–subtropical gyre boundary in the North Atlantic (Bingham et al. 2007; Baehr et al. 2009).
Furthermore, a recent modeling study has suggested that the low-frequency variability of the RAPID–MOCHA appears to be an integrated response to buoyancy forcing over the subpolar gyre (Pillar et al. 2016).
Thus, a measure of the overturning in the subpolar basin contemporaneous with a measure of the buoyancy forcing in that basin likely offers the best possibility of understanding the mechanisms that underpin AMOC variability.
Finally, though it might be expected that the plethora of measurements from the North Atlantic would be sufficient to constrain a measure of the AMOC within the context of an ocean general circulation model, recent studies (Cunningham and Marsh 2010; Karspeck et al. 2015) reveal that there is currently no consensus on the strength or variability of the AMOC in assimilation/reanalysis products.
Read rest at Science Matters
If they were not already feeding us this malarkey that all life on earth came crawling out of the ocean as some dumb fish all Birds a re related to Dinsours according to some nutcases and all humans are related to apes if you are that dumb to beleive that Darwin poppycock
Mr. Clutz,
Good article. You may want to review the article referenced below that relates slowdown of the Gulf Stream Current to geological heat flow.
http://www.plateclimatology.com/gulf-stream-shut-down-caused-by-geological-heat-flow/
First we had scary global warming but when the phoney climate models were exposed a quick name change was called for . That catch all double meaning unassailable phrase “climate change ”
was spoon fed the media bobble heads who lapped it up … for a while . Time for a refresh . The 2018 /2019 marketing plan is global warming now causes climate change which .. you guessed it , causes global cooling . The big flood was a big dud and the polar bears they are a thriving but think of the eco porn possibilities
of an ice age . Get your popcorn kids governments and global warming salesmen will go to any length now to flee the class action suits and jail time for perpetrating the biggest fraud in history .
The Guardian,BBC,NYT’s W.P. nothing but a a bunch of leftists propegandists
We have the Sun, so massive that we are prevented from flying off into space by gravity, one of the weakest forces in physics. The Sun is our nearest example of fusion, which we have not learned how to contain here on Earth, yet.
When we sleep in our own shadow at night, the temperature falls off the table. Thankfully, sunrise saves us daily. Knowing all this, why should we believe that pip-squeak carbon dioxide is like a thermos that keeps hot things hot and cold things cold?
It’s a joke, and a lot of dummies don’t get it.