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The Ocean and Climate
Change Institute: Hot Topics
Introduction
| Printable
Mission | Hot
Topics

»
pdf version of brochure |
Abrupt Climate Change:
Should We Be Worried?
Robert B. Gagosian
President and Director
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Prepared for a panel on abrupt climate
change at the
World Economic Forum
Davos, Switzerland, January 27,
2003
| »
Click HERE
to learn more about abrupt
climate change |
|
Are we overlooking potential abrupt climate
shifts?
Most of the studies
and debates on potential climate change, along
with its ecological and economic impacts, have
focused on the ongoing buildup of industrial
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and a gradual
increase in global temperatures. This line of
thinking, however, fails to consider another
potentially disruptive climate scenario. It
ignores recent and rapidly advancing evidence
that Earth’s climate repeatedly has shifted abruptly
and dramatically in the past, and is
capable of doing so in the future.
 |
The
Global Ocean Conveyor |

Click
to enlarge |
| The
global ocean circulation system, often
called the Ocean Conveyor, transports
heat throughout the planet. White
sections represent warm surface
currents. Purple sections represent
deep cold currents. (Illustration by
Jayne Doucette, WHOI Graphic Services) |
Fossil evidence clearly
demonstrates that Earth’s climate can shift
gears within a decade, establishing new
and different patterns that can persist for
decades to centuries. In addition, these
climate shifts do not necessarily have
universal, global effects. They can generate a
counterintuitive scenario: Even as the earth
as a whole continues to warm gradually, large
regions may experience a precipitous and
disruptive shift into colder climates.
This new paradigm of abrupt climate change has
been well established over the last decade by
research of ocean, earth and atmosphere
scientists at many institutions worldwide. But
the concept remains little known and scarcely
appreciated in the wider community of
scientists, economists, policy makers, and
world political and business leaders. Thus,
world leaders may be planning for climate
scenarios of global warming that are opposite
to what might actually occur.1
It is important to clarify that we are not
contemplating a situation of either
abrupt cooling or global warming. Rather,
abrupt regional cooling and gradual global
warming can unfold simultaneously. Indeed,
greenhouse warming is a destabilizing factor
that makes abrupt climate change more
probable. A 2002 report by the US National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) said, “available
evidence suggests that abrupt climate changes
are not only possible but likely in the
future, potentially with large impacts on
ecosystems and societies.”2
The timing of any abrupt regional
cooling in the future also has critical policy
implications. An abrupt cooling that happens
within the next two decades would produce
different climate effects than one that occurs
after another century of continuing greenhouse
warming.
| The
Conveyor’s Achilles’ Heel? |

 |

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| The
Ocean Conveyor is propelled by the
sinking of cold, salty (and therefore
denser) waters in the North Atlantic
Ocean (blue lines). That creates a
void that pulls warm, salty surface
waters northward (red lines). The
ocean gives up its heat to the
atmosphere above the North Atlantic
Ocean, and prevailing winds (large red
arrows) carry the heat eastward to
warm Europe. (Illustration by Jack
Cook, WHOI Graphic Services). |
If
too much fresh water enters the North
Atlantic, its waters could stop
sinking. The Conveyor would cease.
Heat-bearing Gulf Stream waters (red
lines) would no longer flow into the
North Atlantic, and European and North
American winters would become more
severe. (Illustration by Jack Cook,
WHOI Graphic Services). |
| (provided from a prior posted WH web report and
also published by Nexus, March 2003)

|
| New data shows that North Atlantic waters at depths between 1,000 and 4,000 meters are becoming dramatically less salty, especially in the last decade. Red indicates saltier-than-normal waters. Blue indicates fresher waters. Oceanographers say we may be approaching a threshold that would shut down the Great Ocean Conveyor and cause abrupt climate changes. (Data from Ruth Curry,
WHOI, Bob Dickson, Centre for Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture Science and Igor
Yashayaev, Bedford Institute of Oceanography) |
Are
we ignoring the oceans’ role in climate
change?
Fossil evidence and
computer models demonstrate that Earth’s
complex and dynamic climate system has more
than one mode of operation. Each mode produces
different climate patterns.
The evidence also shows that Earth’s climate
system has sensitive thresholds. Pushed past a
threshold, the system can jump quickly from
one stable operating mode to a completely
different one—“just as the slowly
increasing pressure of a finger eventually
flips a switch and turns on a light,” the
NAS report said.
Scientists have so far identified only one
viable mechanism to induce large, global,
abrupt climate changes: a swift reorganization
of the ocean currents circulating around the
earth. These currents, collectively known as
the Ocean Conveyor, distribute vast quantities
of heat around our planet, and thus play a
fundamental role in governing Earth’s
climate.
The oceans also play a pivotal role in the
distribution and availability of
life-sustaining water throughout our planet.
The oceans are, by far, the planet’s largest
reservoir of water. Evaporation from the ocean
transfers huge amounts of water vapor to the
atmosphere, where it travels aloft until it
cools, condenses, and eventually precipitates
in the form of rain or snow. Changes in ocean
circulation or water properties can disrupt
this hydrological cycle on a global scale,
causing flooding and long-term droughts in
various regions. The El Niño phenomenon is
but a hint of how oceanic changes can
dramatically affect where and how much
precipitation falls throughout the planet.
Thus, the oceans and the atmosphere constitute
intertwined components of Earth’s
climate system. But our present knowledge of
ocean dynamics does not match our knowledge of
atmospheric processes. The oceans’ essential
role is too often neglected in our
calculations.
Does
Earth’s climate system have an
‘Achilles’ heel’?
Here is a simplified
description of some basic ocean-atmosphere
dynamics that regulate Earth’s climate:
The equatorial sun warms the ocean surface and
enhances evaporation in the tropics. This
leaves the tropical ocean saltier. The Gulf
Stream, a limb of the Ocean Conveyor, carries
an enormous volume of heat-laden, salty water
up the East Coast of the United States, and
then northeast toward Europe.
This oceanic heat pump is an important
mechanism for reducing equator-to-pole
temperature differences. It moderates
Earth’s climate, particularly in the North
Atlantic region. Conveyor circulation
increases the northward transport of warmer
waters in the Gulf Stream by about 50 percent.
At colder northern latitudes, the ocean
releases this heat to the
atmosphere—especially in winter when the
atmosphere is colder than the ocean and
ocean-atmosphere temperature gradients
increase. The Conveyor warms North Atlantic
regions by as much as 5° Celsius and
significantly tempers average winter
temperatures.
But records of past climates—from a variety
of sources such as deep-sea sediments and
ice-sheet cores—show that the Conveyor has slowed
and shut down several times in the
past. This shutdown curtailed heat delivery to
the North Atlantic and caused substantial
cooling throughout the region. One earth
scientist has called the Conveyor “the
Achilles’ heel of our climate system.”3
| Dramatic
Changes in the North Atlantic |

Click to enlarge |

Click
to enlarge |
| (B.
Dickson, et. al., in Nature,
April 2002). |
| Subpolar
seas bordering the North Atlantic have
become noticeably less salty since the
mid-1960s, especially in the last
decade. This is the largest and most
dramatic oceanic change ever measured
in the era of modern instruments. This
has resulted in a freshening of the
deep ocean in the North Atlantic,
which in the past disrupted the Ocean
Conveyor and caused abrupt climate
changes. |
What
can disrupt the Ocean Conveyor?
Solving this puzzle
requires an understanding of what launches and
drives the Conveyor in the first place. The
answer, to a large degree, is salt.
For a variety of reasons, North Atlantic
waters are relatively salty compared with
other parts of the world ocean. Salty water is
denser than fresh water. Cold water is denser
than warm water. When the warm, salty waters
of the North Atlantic release heat to the
atmosphere, they become colder and begin to
sink.
In the seas that ring the northern fringe of
the Atlantic—the Labrador, Irminger, and
Greenland Seas—the ocean releases large
amounts of heat to the atmosphere and then a
great volume of cold, salty water sinks to the
abyss. This water flows slowly at great depths
into the South Atlantic and eventually
throughout the world’s oceans.
Thus, the North Atlantic is the source of the
deep limb of the Ocean Conveyor. The plunge of
this great mass of cold, salty water propels
the global ocean’s conveyor-like circulation
system. It also helps draw warm, salty
tropical surface waters northward to replace
the sinking waters. This process is called
“thermohaline circulation,” from the Greek
words “thermos” (heat) and “halos”
(salt).
If cold, salty North Atlantic waters did not
sink, a primary force driving global ocean
circulation could slacken and cease. Existing
currents could weaken or be redirected. The
resulting reorganization of the ocean’s
circulation would reconfigure Earth’s
climate patterns.
Computer models simulating ocean-atmosphere
climate dynamics indicate that the North
Atlantic region would cool 3° to 5° Celsius
if Conveyor circulation were totally
disrupted. It would produce winters twice as
cold as the worst winters on record in the
eastern United States in the past century. In
addition, previous Conveyor shutdowns have
been linked with widespread droughts
throughout the globe.
It is crucial to remember two points: 1) If
thermohaline circulation shuts down and
induces a climate transition, severe winters
in the North Atlantic region would likely
persist for decades to centuries—until
conditions reached another threshold at which
thermohaline circulation might resume. 2)
Abrupt regional cooling may occur even as the
earth, on average, continues to warm.
Are
worrisome signals developing in the ocean?
If the climate system’s
Achilles’ heel is the Conveyor, the
Conveyor’s Achilles’ heel is the North
Atlantic. An influx of fresh water into the
North Atlantic’s surface could create a lid
of more buoyant fresh water, lying atop
denser, saltier water. This fresh water would
effectively cap and insulate the surface of
the North Atlantic, curtailing the ocean’s
transfer of heat to the atmosphere.
An influx of fresh water would also dilute the
North Atlantic’s salinity. At a critical but
unknown threshold, when North Atlantic waters
are no longer sufficiently salty and dense,
they may stop sinking. An important force
driving the Conveyor could quickly diminish,
with climate impacts resulting within a
decade.
 |
A
Long Record of Abrupt Climate Changes |

Click
to enlarge |
(R.B.
Alley, from The Two-Mile Time
Machine, 2000).
Ice cores extracted from the two-mile
thick Greenland ice sheet preserve
records of ancient air temperatures.
The records show several times when
climate shifted in time spans as short
as a decade.
The Younger Dryas —about 12,700
years ago, average temperatures in the
North Atlantic region abruptly
plummeted nearly 5°C and remained
that way for 1,300 years before
rapidly warming again.
The 8,200-Year Event —A similar
abrupt cooling occurred 8,200 years
ago. It was not so severe and lasted
only about a century. But if a similar
cooling event occurred today, it would
be catastrophic.
The Medieval Period —An
abrupt warming took place about 1,000
years ago. It was not nearly so
dramatic as past events, but it
nevertheless allowed the Norse to
establish settlements in Greenland.
The Little Ice Age —The Norse
abandoned their Greenland settlements
when the climate turned abruptly
colder 700 years ago. Between 1300 and
1850, severe winters had profound
agricultural, economic, and political
impacts in Europe.
|
In an important paper
published in 2002 in Nature,
oceanographers monitoring and analyzing
conditions in the North Atlantic concluded
that the North Atlantic has been freshening
dramatically—continuously for the past 40
years but especially in the past decade.4
The new data show that since the mid-1960s,
the subpolar seas feeding the North Atlantic
have steadily and noticeably become less salty
to depths of 1,000 to 4,000 meters. This is
the largest and most dramatic oceanic change
ever measured in the era of modern
instruments.
At present the influx of fresher water has
been distributed throughout the water column.
But at some point, fresh water may begin to
pile up at the surface of the North Atlantic.
When that occurs, the Conveyor could slow down
or cease operating.
Signs of a possible slowdown already exist. A
2001 report in Nature indicates that
the flow of cold, dense water from the
Norwegian and Greenland Seas into the North
Atlantic has diminished by at least 20 percent
since 1950.5
At
what threshold will the Conveyor cease?
The short answer is: We do not know. Nor have
scientists determined the relative
contributions of a variety of sources that may
be adding fresh water to the North Atlantic.
Among the suspects are melting glaciers or
Arctic sea ice, or increased precipitation
falling directly into the ocean or entering
via the great rivers that discharge into the
Arctic Ocean.6 Global warming may
be an exacerbating factor.
Though we have invested in, and now rely on, a
global network of meteorological stations to
monitor fast-changing atmospheric conditions,
at present we do not have a system in place
for monitoring slower-developing, but
critical, ocean circulation changes.
The great majority of oceanographic
measurements was taken throughout the years by
research ships and ships of
opportunity—especially during the Cold War
era for anti-submarine warfare purposes. Many
were taken incidentally by Ocean Weather
Stations—a network of ships stationed in the
ocean after World War II, whose primary duty
was to guide transoceanic airplane flights.
Starting in the 1970s, satellite technology
superseded these weather ships. The demise of
the OWS network and the end of the Cold War
have left oceanographers with access to far
fewer data in recent years.
Initial efforts to remedy this deficit are
under way,7 but these efforts are
nascent and time is of the essence. Satellites
can measure wind stress and ocean circulation
globally, but only at the ocean surface.
Also recently launched (but not nearly fully
funded) is the Argo program—an international
program to seed the global ocean with an
armada of some 3,000 free-floating buoys that
measure upper ocean temperature and
salinity. Measuring deep ocean currents
is critical for observing Conveyor behavior,
but it is more difficult. Efforts have just
begun to measure deep ocean water properties
and currents at strategic locations with
long-term moored buoy arrays, but vast ocean
voids remain unmonitored.
 |
8,200
Years Ago—An Abruptly Colder, Drier
Earth |

Click
to enlarge |
| Rapid
changes in ocean circulation are
linked to an abrupt climate change
8,200 years ago that had global
effects. Some regions turned
significantly colder while others
experienced widespread drought. (R.B.
Alley, et al., in Geology,
1997) |
New ocean-based instruments also offer the
potential to reveal the ocean’s essential,
but poorly understood, role in the
hydrological cycle—which establishes global
rainfall and snowfall patterns. Global warming
affects the hydrological cycle because a
warmer atmosphere carries more water. This, in
turn, has implications for greenhouse warming,
since water vapor itself is the most abundant,
and often overlooked, greenhouse gas.
What
can the past teach us about the future?
Revealing the past behavior of Earth’s
climate system provides powerful insight into
what it may do in the future. Geological
records confirm the potential for abrupt
thermohaline-induced climate transitions that
would generate severe winters in the North
Atlantic region. A bad winter or two brings
inconvenience that societies can adapt to with
small, temporary adjustments. But a persistent
string of severe winters, lasting decades to a
century, can cause glaciers to advance, rivers
to freeze, and sea ice to grow and spread. It
can render prime agricultural lands unfarmable.
About 12,700 years ago, as Earth emerged from
the most recent ice age and began to warm, the
Conveyor was disrupted. Within a decade,
average temperatures in the North Atlantic
region plummeted nearly 5° Celsius.
This cold period, known as the Younger Dryas,
lasted 1,300 years. It is named after an
Arctic wildflower. Scientists have found
substantial evidence that cold-loving dryas
plants thrived during this era in European and
US regions that today are too warm. Deep-sea
sediment cores show that icebergs extended as
far south as the coast of Portugal. The
Younger Dryas ended as abruptly as it began.
Within a decade, North Atlantic waters and the
regional climate warmed again to pre-Younger
Dryas levels.
A similar cooling occurred 8,200 years ago. It
lasted only about a century—a blip in
geological time, but a catastrophe if such a
cooling occurred today.
Are
‘little ice ages’ and ‘megadroughts’
possible?
Scientists are investigating whether changes
in ocean circulation may have played a role in
causing or amplifying the “Little Ice Age”
between 1300 and 1850. This period of abruptly
shifting climate regimes and more severe
winters had profound agricultural, economic,
and political impacts in Europe and North
America and changed the course of history.
During this era, the Norse abruptly abandoned
their settlements in Greenland. The era is
captured in the frozen landscapes of Pieter
Bruegel’s 16th-century paintings and in the
famous painting of George Washington’s 1776
crossing of an icebound Delaware River, which
rarely freezes today. But the era is also
marked by persistent crop failures, famine,
disease, and mass migrations. “The Little
Ice Age,” wrote one historian, “is a
chronicle of human vulnerability in the face
of sudden climate change.”8
Societies are similarly vulnerable to abrupt
climate changes that can turn a year or two of
diminished rainfall into prolonged, severe,
widespread droughts. A growing body of
evidence from joint archaeological and
paleoclimatological studies is demonstrating
linkages among ocean-related climate shifts,
“megadroughts,” and precipitous collapses
of civilizations, including the Akkadian
empire in Mesopotamia 4,200 years ago, the
Mayan empire in central America 1,500 years
ago, and the Anasazi in the American Southwest
in the late 13th century.9
Rapid changes in ocean circulation associated
with the abrupt North Atlantic cooling event
8,200 years ago have been linked with
simultaneous, widespread drying in the
American West, Africa, and Asia.10
Regional cooling events also have been linked
with changes in the Southwest Asian monsoon,
whose rains are probably the most critical
factor supporting civilizations from Africa to
India to China.11
What
future climate scenarios should we consider?
The debate on global change has largely failed
to factor in the inherently chaotic,
sensitively balanced, and threshold-laden
nature of Earth’s climate system and the
increased likelihood of abrupt climate change.
Our current speculations about future climate
and its impacts have focused on the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
which has forecast gradual global warming of
1.4° to 5.8° Celsius over the next century.
It is prudent to superimpose on this forecast
the potential for abrupt climate change
induced by thermohaline shutdown. Such a
change could cool down selective areas of the
globe by 3° to 5° Celsius, while
simultaneously causing drought in many parts
of the world. These climate changes would
occur quickly, even as other regions continue
to warm slowly. It is critical to consider the
economic and political ramifications of this
geographically selective climate change.
Specifically, the region most affected by a
shutdown—the countries bordering the North
Atlantic—is also one of the world’s most
developed.
The key component of this analysis is when
a shutdown of the Conveyor occurs. Two
scenarios are useful to contemplate:
Scenario 1: Conveyor slows down within next
two decades.
Such a scenario could quickly and markedly
cool the North Atlantic region, causing
disruptions in global economic activity. These
disruptions may be exacerbated because the
climate changes occur in a direction opposite
to what is commonly expected, and they occur
at a pace that makes adaptation difficult.
Scenario 2: Conveyor slows down a century
from now.
In such a scenario, cooling of the North
Atlantic region may partially or totally offset
the major effects of global warming in this
region. Thus, the climate of the North
Atlantic region may rapidly return to one that
more resembles today’s—even as other parts
of the world, particularly less-developed
regions, experience the unmitigated brunt of
global warming. If the Conveyor subsequently
turns on again, the “deferred” warming may
be delivered in a decade.
What
can we do to improve our future security?
Ignoring or downplaying the probability of
abrupt climate change could prove costly.
Ecosystems, economies, and societies can adapt
more easily to gradual, anticipated changes.
Some current policies and practices may be
ill-advised and may prove inadequate in a
world of rapid and unforeseen climate change.
The challenge to world leaders is to reduce
vulnerabilities by enhancing society’s
ability to monitor, plan for, and adapt to
rapid change.
All human endeavor hinges on the vicissitudes
of climate. Thus, the potential for abrupt
climate change should prompt us to re-examine
possible impacts on many climate-affected
sectors. They include: agriculture; water
resources; energy resources; forest and timber
management; fisheries; coastal land
management; transportation; insurance;
recreation and tourism; disaster relief; and
public health (associated with
climate-related, vector-borne diseases such as
malaria and cholera).
Developing countries lacking scientific
resources and economic infrastructures are
especially vulnerable to the social and
economic impacts of abrupt climate change.
However, with growing globalization of
economies, adverse impacts (although likely to
vary from region to region) are likely to
spill across national boundaries, through
human and biotic migration, economic shocks,
and political aftershocks, the National
Academy of Sciences (NAS) report stated.
The key is to reduce our uncertainty about
future climate change, and to improve our
ability to predict what could happen and when.
A first step is to establish the oceanic
equivalent of our land-based meteorological
instrument network. Such a network would begin
to reveal climate-influencing oceanic
processes that have been beyond our ability to
grasp. These instruments, monitoring critical
present-day conditions, can be coupled with
enhanced computer modeling, which can project
how Earth’s climate system may react in the
future. Considerably more research is also
required to learn more about the complex
ocean-air processes that induced rapid climate
changes in the past, and thus how our climate
system may behave in the future.
The NAS report is titled Abrupt Climate
Change: Inevitable Surprises. Climate
change may be inevitable. But it is not
inevitable for society to be surprised or
ill-prepared.
References:
1 “Are We on the Brink of a New
Little Ice Age?”—testimony to the US
Commission on Ocean Policy, September 25,
2002, by T. Joyce and L. Keigwin (Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution).
2 Abrupt Climate Change:
Inevitable Surprises, US National Academy
of Sciences, National Research Council
Committee on Abrupt Climate Change, National
Academy Press, 2002.
3 “Thermohaline Circulation, the
Achilles’ Heel of Our Climate System: Will
Man-Made CO2 Upset the Current Balance?” in Science,
Vol. 278, November 28, 1997, by W. S. Broecker
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia
University).
4 “Rapid Freshening of the Deep
North Atlantic Ocean Over the Past Four
Decades,” in Nature, Vol. 416, April
25, 2002, by B. Dickson (Centre for
Environment, Fisheries, and Aquaculture
Science, Lowestoft, UK), I. Yashayaev, J.
Meincke, B. Turrell, S. Dye, and J. Hoffort.
5 “Decreasing Overflow from the
Nordic Seas into the Atlantic Ocean Through
the Faroe Bank Channel Since 1950,” in Nature,
Vol. 411, June 21, 2001, by B. Hansen (Faroe
Fisheries Laboratory, Faroe Islands), W.
Turrell, and S. Østerhus.
6 “Increasing River Discharge to
the Arctic Ocean,” in Science, Vol.
298, December 13, 2002, by B. J. Peterson
(Marine Biological Laboratory), R. M. Holmes,
J. W. McClelland, C. J. Vörösmarty, R. B.
Lammers, A. I. Shiklomanov, I. A. Shiklomanov,
and S. Rahmstorf.
7 “Ocean Observatories,” in Oceanus,
Vol. 42, No. 1, 2000, published by the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution.
8 The Little Ice Age: How Climate
Made History 1300-1850, by Brian Fagan
(University of California, Santa Barbara),
Basic Books, 2000.
9 “Cultural Responses to Climate
Change During the Late Holocene,” in Science,
Vol. 292, April 27, 2001, by P. B. deMenocal
(Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia
University).
10 “Holocene Climate Instability:
A Prominent, Widespread Event 8,200 Years
Ago,” in Geology, Vol. 26, No. 6,
1997, by R. B. Alley and T. Sowers
(Pennsylvania State University), P. A.
Mayewski, M. Stuiver, K. C. Taylor, and P. U.
Clark.
11 “A High-Resolution
Absolute-Dated Late Pleistocene Monsoon Record
From Hulu Cave, China,” in Science,
Vol. 294, December 14, 2001, by Y. J. Wang (Nanjing
Normal University, China), H. Cheng, R. L.
Edwards, Z. S. An, J. Y. Wu, C. C. Shen, and
J. A. Dorale.
ROBERT B. GAGOSIAN is President and
Director of Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. He
was appointed Director in 1994 and President
in 2001, following a distinguished career as a
marine geochemist. He has served as Chairman
of the Board of Governors for the
52-institution Consortium for Oceanographic
Research and Education and as a member of the
Ocean Research Advisory Panel of the US
National Oceanographic Partnership Program. In
2002, he was appointed to the Science Advisory
Panel of the US Commission on Ocean Policy and
the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s Science Advisory Board, and
was elected a Fellow of the American Academy
of Arts & Sciences.

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