The real-life Day After Tomorrow: The Gulf Stream could COLLAPSE at 'any time' from 2025 thanks to climate change – plunging Europe into a deep freeze, warn scientists

  • The current is known formally as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation
  • Its collapse was featured in the Hollywood blockbuster 'The Day After Tomorrow'

In the Hollywood blockbuster 'The Day After Tomorrow', ocean currents around the world stop as a result of global warming, triggering a new Ice Age on Earth.

That may have been science fiction but scientists say the terrifying prophecy could soon become a reality.

That's because new research warns that the Atlantic Ocean current which drives the Gulf Stream could collapse at 'any time' from 2025 thanks to climate change.

Known formally as the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), the current is the driving force which brings warm water from the Gulf of Mexico up to the UK and is responsible for mild winters in Western Europe.

If it collapsed, however, the impact would be devastating.

Europe would be plunged into a deep freeze, while most of Africa, the Caribbean, and South American countries such as Colombia, Peru and Bolivia would experience rocketing temperatures.

Fears: New research warns that the Atlantic Ocean current which drives the Gulf Stream (pictured) could collapse at 'any time' from 2025 thanks to climate change

Fears: New research warns that the Atlantic Ocean current which drives the Gulf Stream (pictured) could collapse at 'any time' from 2025 thanks to climate change

WHAT IS THE AMOC? 

The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is an important component of the Earth’s climate system.

The pattern carries warm, salty water in the upper layers of the Atlantic northward, and colder fresh water in the deep Atlantic southward. 

This ocean circulation system transports a substantial amount of heat from the Tropics and Southern Hemisphere toward the North Atlantic, where the heat is transferred to the atmosphere.

High levels in carbon dioxide would cause Arctic and Greenland ice melt, increasing the amount of freshwater run-off into the ocean.

This increase in freshwater would dirupt the AMOC, which relies on a balance between fresh and salt water.

 

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Scientists at the University of Copenhagen say such a scenario is '95 per cent certain' by the end of this century if current greenhouse gas emissions persist.

More likely is that without significant action to tackle climate change it will happen in 2057, the experts added, although there is a chance the collapse could come as early as two years' time.

The ocean currents play a vital role in Earth's current climate because they redistribute heat, cold and rainfall between the tropics and the northernmost parts of the Atlantic region.

'Shutting down the AMOC can have very serious consequences for Earth's climate, for example, by changing how heat and precipitation are distributed globally,' said Professor Peter Ditlevsen, from the University of Copenhagen's Niels Bohr Institute. 

'While a cooling of Europe may seem less severe as the globe as a whole becomes warmer and heat waves occur more frequently, this shutdown will contribute to an increased warming of the tropics, where rising temperatures have already given rise to challenging living conditions.'

He added: 'Our result underscores the importance of reducing global greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible.'

The researchers used ocean temperature data from the last 150 years and combined it with innovative new statistical tools to come to their conclusion.

However, it is at odds with the latest report by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which cited climate model simulations suggesting such change to the AMOC was very unlikely this century.

The Danish researchers' prediction is based on the monitoring of early warning signals which ocean currents exhibit as they become unstable.

Although these have been reported previously, the experts say only now has the development of advanced statistical methods made it possible to predict just when a collapse will occur.

Analysis: The researchers used ocean temperature data from the last 150 years and combined it with innovative new statistical tools to come to their conclusion

Analysis: The researchers used ocean temperature data from the last 150 years and combined it with innovative new statistical tools to come to their conclusion

Science fiction: In the Hollywood blockbuster 'The Day After Tomorrow' (pictured), ocean currents around the world stop as a result of global warming, triggering a new Ice Age on Earth

Science fiction: In the Hollywood blockbuster 'The Day After Tomorrow' (pictured), ocean currents around the world stop as a result of global warming, triggering a new Ice Age on Earth

The researchers analysed sea surface temperatures in a specific area of the North Atlantic from 1870 to today. 

They referred to these as 'fingerprints' which give an indication to the strength of the AMOC, or Thermohaline Circulation — which has only been properly measured for the past 15 years. 

'Using new and improved statistical tools, we've made calculations that provide a more robust estimate of when a collapse of the Thermohaline Circulation is most likely to occur, something we had not been able to do before,' said Professor Susanne Ditlevsen, of the University of Copenhagen. 

Until the 1800s, the AMOC was relatively stable. However, the current declined after the so-called 'Little Ice Age' ended in 1850.

This saw temperatures drop so low that the River Thames completely froze over, enabling Londoners to cross the waterway on foot.

The last total shutdown of the AMOC is believed to have occurred at the end of the last proper Ice Age around 12,000 years ago, where temperatures in western Europe plummeted by up to 10°C.

The new research has been published in the journal Nature Communications

What would the world look like if the Gulf Stream collapsed?  

If the AMOC was to collapse, far less heat would reach western Europe and the region would be plunged into very severe winters, the kind of scenario depicted in an extreme fashion in the movie The Day After Tomorrow. 

Until the 1800s, it was relatively stable but the current declined after the so-called 'Little Ice Age' ended in 1850. 

Temperatures dropped low enough that the River Thames completely froze over and records show Londoners crossing the waterway on foot. 

The last shutdown was probably at the end of the last Ice Age, 12,000 years ago, and it prompted a temperature drop of 5°C to 10°C in western Europe. 

In the event of another collapse, not only would European winters become much colder but summer droughts, storms and heatwaves would likely become more common. 

Sea levels could rise up to nearly 20 inches around the North Atlantic Basin, which surrounds the eastern US coast.

This would eventually push people living along the coast further inland to escape flooding. A widespread collapse of deep-sea eco-systems would occur. 

In the US, Florida would be particularly badly affected as the flow of water northwards would be halted, seeing it collect on the state's shoreline.  

A study published last year looked at how the cessation of the AMOC may impact the UK specifically. 

The Little Ice Age, a centuries-long cold period that lasted until about 1850. Experts believe that as the North Atlantic began to warm near the end of the Little Ice Age, freshwater disrupted the system. Pictured is Thames Frost Fair, 1683–84, by Thomas Wyke

The Little Ice Age, a centuries-long cold period that lasted until about 1850. Experts believe that as the North Atlantic began to warm near the end of the Little Ice Age, freshwater disrupted the system. Pictured is Thames Frost Fair, 1683–84, by Thomas Wyke

University of Exeter researchers made a computer model and found that by 2080 the weather would be 3.4°C colder than it was last year.

Rainfall during the growing season is expected to drop by 123mm, they added. 

This, Ars Technica reports, is enough to reduce the UK's arable land from 32 percent to just seven percent, greatly affecting food production.  

The effects would be felt not in Europe and the United States, with forecasts also projecting that the collapse of the AMOC would also increase drought in the Sahel in Africa.