The Science of Abrupt Climate Change: Should we be worried?
By Jeffrey Masters, Ph.D. — Director of Meteorology, Weather Underground, Inc.
Climate Change Resources
Hot Topics
- Introduction to Climate Change
- The IPCC Report on Climate Change
- The Scientific Consensus on Climate Change
- Extreme Weather
- Sea Level Rise
- Arctic Sea Ice
- Glaciers
- The Science of Abrupt Climate Change
- The Effect of Nuclear War On Climate
- Global Warming Causes Stratospheric Cooling
- Ozone Hole
- Volcanoes
- PETM: Global Warming, Naturally
- Heat Mortality
- Acid Oceans
Snow and Ice
- Arctic Sea Ice
- The Northwest Passage Opens
- Polar Bears
- Greenland
- Permafrost
- Permafrost In a Warming World
- Glaciers
Climate Change Opinion
- Don't Shoot the Messenger
- More CO2 = Healthier Planet?
- Hacked Climate Scientist Emails
- The Manufactured Doubt Industry
- Is Carbon Dioxide a Pollutant?
- The Skeptics vs. the Ozone Hole
- Dr. Jeff Masters' Opinions Page
Book and Movie Reviews
- Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth
- Michael Crichton's State of Fear
- The Day After Tomorrow™ movie
- Review of the book, Field Notes from a Catastrophe
Pollution and Health
Hurricanes
Weather
Climate Change Blogs

By Dr. Ricky Rood
So the question that has been posed to me last week, can we expect
such high temperatures in the future? Yes. If we use our experience and
observations for the basis of decision making, then the rational answer
is yes. We will see more records. We will see an earlier spring. We will
see warmer times.
By Dr. Jeff Masters
Wintertime minimum temperatures in the U.S. have risen so much in
recent decades that the USDA had to update their Plant Hardiness Zone
Map for gardeners for the first time since 1990. Ann Arbor used to be in
Zone 5, but is now solidly in the warmer Zone 6. This got me to
wondering, what sort of plants in Zone 6, until now unknown in Ann
Arbor, might migrate northwards in coming decades into the city? The
truly awful possibility: The Ohio Buckeye Tree.
Introduction
We generally consider climate changes as taking place on the scale
of hundreds or even thousands of years. However, since the early 1990s, a
radical shift in the scientific understanding of Earth's climate
history has occurred. We now know that that major regional and global
climate shifts have occurred in just a few decades or even a single
year. The most recent of these shifts occurred just 8200 years ago. If
an abrupt climate change of similar magnitude happened today, it would
have severe consequences for humans and natural ecosystems. Although
scientists consider an abrupt climate change unlikely in the next 100
years, their understanding of the phenomena is still a work-in-progress,
and such a change could be triggered instantly by natural processes or
by human-caused global warming with little warning.The National Academy of Sciences--the board of scientists established by Congress in 1863 to advise the federal government on scientific matters--compiled a comprehensive report in 2002 entitled, Abrupt Climate Change: Inevitable Surprises. The 244-page report, which contains over 500 references, was written by a team of 59 of the top researchers in climate, and represents the most authoritative source of information about abrupt climate change available. Most of the material that follows was taken from this report.
The Greenland Ice Sheet: The Key to Understanding Earth's Climate Record

Accessing this treasure-trove of climatic information is a huge undertaking--cores of ice must be drilled miles deep in some of the most inhospitable places on Earth. In 1989 the National Science Foundation funded the $25 million Greenland Ice Sheet Project II (GISP2) to drill an ice core through the entire two mile depth of the Greenland ice sheet. At the same time, a separate European project (GRIP), drilled through the ice just 20 miles away, providing a crucial independent check of the GISP2 data. By 1993, both the GRIP and GISP2 drills had hit bedrock, and two miles of ice cores, preserving 110,000 years of climate history in year-by-year layers, were taken to laboratories for analysis.
What the scientists found was surprising and unnerving. They had known from previous ice core and ocean sediment core data that Earth's climate had fluctuated significantly in the past. But what astonished them was the rapidity with which these changes occurred.
Ocean and lake sediment data from places such as California, Venezuela, and Antarctica have confirmed that these sudden climate changes affected not just Greenland, but the entire world. During the past 110,000 years, there have been at least 20 such abrupt climate changes. Only one period of stable climate has existed during the past 110,000 years--the 11,000 years of modern climate (the "Holocene" era). "Normal" climate for Earth is the climate of sudden extreme jumps--like a light switch flicking on and off.

As seen in Figure 1, the ice core record showed frequent sudden warmings and coolings of 15°F (8°C) or more. Many of these changes happened in less than 10 years. In one case 11,600 years ago, when Earth emerged from the final phase of the most recent ice age (an event called the Younger Dryas), the Greenland ice core data showed that a 15°F (8°C) warming occurred in less than a decade, accompanied by a doubling of snow accumulation in 3 years. Most of this doubling occurred in a single year.
What causes abrupt climate change?
Current theories on the cause of abrupt climatic change focus on
sudden shut downs and start-ups of the Meridional Overturning
Circulation (MOC) (also referred to as the thermohaline circulation),
which is a global network of density-driven ocean currents. The
Meridional Overturning Circulation transports a tremendous amount of
heat northward, keeping the North Atlantic and much of Europe up to 9°F
(5°C) warmer, particularly in the winter. A sudden shut down of this
current would have a ripple effect throughout the ocean-atmosphere
system, forcing worldwide changes in ocean currents, and in the path of
the atmospheric jet stream. Studies of North Atlantic Ocean sediments
have revealed that the Meridional Overturning Circulation has shut down
many times in the past, and that many of these shut downs coincide with
the abrupt climate change events noted in the Greenland ice cores.How does one shut down the Meridional Overturning Circulation? First, one must examine the MOC itself. The MOC, or Great Ocean Conveyor Belt (Figure 2), is a system of interconnected ocean currents that girdle the planet.

At the surface, warmer ocean currents (shown here in orange) are driven by the winds, and so move parallel to the wind direction, except where continental land masses block the way.
Water can also move vertically in the ocean. High density water sinks, and low density water rises. Salty water is more dense than fresh water, and cold water is more dense than warm water, so that wherever we find cold, salty water, it tends to sink. Colder currents (shown here in blue) are deeper and have higher salinity.
In the tropical Atlantic, the sun's heat evaporates large amounts of water, creating relatively warm, salty ocean water. This warm, salty water flows westward toward North America, then up the East Coast of the U.S., then northeastward toward Europe, forming the mighty Gulf Stream current. As this warm, salty water reaches the ocean regions on either side of Greenland, cold winds blowing off of Canada and Greenland cool the water substantially (in Figure 2, these regions are marked with white circles labeled, "Heat release to the atmosphere.") These cool, salty waters are now very dense compared to the surrounding waters, and sink to the bottom of the ocean. Thus, the oceanic areas by Greenland where this sinking occurs are called "deep-water formation areas". This North Atlantic deep water flows southward toward Antarctica, eventually making it all the way to the Pacific Ocean, where it rises back to the surface to complete the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt. It takes about 1000 years for the water to make a complete circuit around the globe.
Since the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt is driven in part by differences in ocean water density, if one can pump enough fresh water into the ocean in the key areas on either side of Greenland where the Gulf Stream waters cool and sink, this will lower the ocean's salinity (and therefore its density) enough so that the waters can no longer sink. As a result, the Atlantic conveyor belt and Gulf Stream current would shut down in just a few years, dramatically altering the climate.
How much fresh water is needed to shut down the MOC?
It is unknown precisely how much fresh water is needed to shut down
the MOC. Scientists are fairly certain that the last two abrupt coolings
seen the Greenland ice core, the "Younger Dryas" event and the "8200
years before present" event (Figure 1),
both occurred when huge North American glacial melt-water lakes flooded
down the St. Lawrence River into the North Atlantic when the ice dams
restraining the lakes broke. The sudden addition of low-density fresh
water presumably partially or totally stopped the sinking of ocean
waters in the North Atlantic, slowing or completely stopping the
Meridional Overturning Circulation. Once the fresh water got into the
North Atlantic, it stayed, puddling on top of the ocean and freezing in
winter. The Meridional Overturning Circulation stayed shut off for about
1100 years during the Younger Dryas event, then suddenly restarted, for
reasons scientists don't understand. Current computer models of the
climate cannot reproduce the observed sudden shut-down or start-up of
the Meridional Overturning Circulation at the beginning and end of the
Younger Dryas period.Other sudden shut downs of the Meridional Overturning Circulation observed in ice core and ocean sediment records are not thought to be due to sudden melt-water floods into the North Atlantic. These events may have happened simply because Earth's climate system is chaotic, or perhaps because some critical threshold was crossed when increases in precipitation, river run-off, and ice melt put enough fresh water into the ocean to shut down the Meridional Overturning Circulation.
How likely is it that global warming will trigger abrupt climate change?
Global warming will increase precipitation, river run-off, melting
of the Greenland ice sheet, and melting of polar sea ice, all of which
will increase the amount of fresh water flowing into the critical
deep-water formation areas by Greenland. In the 2007 IPCC Fourth Assessment Report Summary for Policymakers (PDF File) it states that, based on current model simulations, it is very likely
(90-99% confidence) that the meridional overturning circulation (MOC)
of the Atlantic Ocean will slow down during the 21st century. It also
confirms the scientific consensus that is very unlikely the MOC will
undergo a large abrupt transition during this century. Today's science
is such that any long-term assessments of the MOC cannot be made with
confidence.
How would the climate change if the Meridional overturning circulation shut down?
A shut down of the Meridional overturning circulation would suddenly
decrease the amount of heat in the North Atlantic, leading to much
colder temperatures in Europe and North America. A 2003 report
prepared for the Department of Defense outlines what would happen if an
abrupt climatic change similar to the 8200 years before present event
were to recur today:- Annual average temperatures would drop up to 5° F in North America, and up to 6° F in northern Europe. This is not sufficient to trigger an ice age, which requires about a 10° F drop in temperature world-wide, but could bring about conditions like experienced in 1816--the famed "year without a summer". In that year, volcanic ash from the mighty Tambora volcanic eruption in Indonesia blocked the sun's rays, significantly cooling the globe. Snow fell in New England in June, and killing frosts in July and August caused widespread crop failures and famine in New England and northern Europe.
- Annual average temperatures would warm up to 4° F in many areas of the Southern Hemisphere.
- Multi-year droughts in regions unaccustomed to drought would affect critical agricultural and water resource regions world-wide, greatly straining food and water supplies.
- Winter storms and winds would strengthen over North America and Europe.
On the freezing of the UK and Europe
The possibility of the freezing of the UK and Europe will be
determined by a "tug-of-war" of sorts, between the amount of greenhouse
gases and the speed with which the MOC slows down. Greenhouse gases may
have more of an impact than a slowing of the MOC, simply because they
are more abundant today than ever in the earth's record. (CO2 levels
were at 380 ppm as of 2007, and were never above 300 ppm during the
400,000 years studied in Antarctic ice cores).Ocean experts see the MOC as having three levels: "faster", "slower", or "off." A 2005 comparison of eleven climate models showed that the MOC will likely be slowed by 10-50%, however, because the levels of carbon dioxide are so elevated, any cooling produced by the MOC slowing would be modest because the greenhouse gases would more than compensate. As a result, a net warming is still shown by these models for the UK and surrounding countries. Improving our measurements to monitor the MOC will allow for better predictions and reduce uncertainty of the amount of warming or cooling these areas of northern Europe will encounter.
What is being done about abrupt climate change?
The immediate obvious needs are for accurate, long-term measurements
of the temperature, salinity, and flow rates of the major ocean
currents in the North Atlantic Ocean. An expedition set sail from Great
Britain on Feb. 13 2004, to provide just that. The voyage was part of a
joint US/UK research project called Rapid Climate Change, which began in 2001. In the U.S., Senator Susan Collins (R-Maine) sponsored bill S.1164
to authorize $60 million for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) to study abrupt climate change. On March 9, 2004,
the Senate Commerce Committee approved the bill. It defines abrupt
climate change as "a change in the climate that occurs so rapidly or
unexpectedly that human or natural systems have difficulty adapting to
the climate as changed." The bill would create a research program within
NOAA's Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research to determine what
causes sudden climate changes and using computer models to predict
climate change events. This bill did not pass, and there is little
chance for revival. The NTSC Joint Subcommittee On Ocean Science and
Technology authored an Ocean Research Priorities Plan in January 2007,
providing five key elements for reducing our vulnerability to abrupt
climate change. These include: daily monitoring of ocean currents,
temperature, and carbon, now-casting, model development,
past-climate-change reconstructions, and additional climate-impact
assessments.
Conclusion
The historical records shows us that abrupt climate change is not
only possible--it is the normal state of affairs. The present warm,
stable climate is a rare anomaly. It behooves us to learn as much as we
can about the climate system so that we may be able to predict when the
next abrupt shift in climate will come. Until we know better when this
might happen, it would be wise to stop pouring so much carbon dioxide
into the air. A nasty surprise might be lurking just around the corner.
In the words of Dr. Wally Broecker, "the climate system is an angry
beast, and we are poking it."
Related Blogs
Dr. Jeff Masters' Recent Climate Change Blogs
- My worst global warming fear: buckeyes in Ann Arbor - February 10, 2012
- New USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map for gardeners shows a warming climate - February 1, 2012
- 2011: Earth's 11th warmest year; where is the climate headed? - January 27, 2012
- Damage losses and climate change - January 3, 2012
- Deadliest weather disaster of 2011: the East African drought - December 20, 2011
Dr. Ricky Rood's Recent Climate Change Blogs
- Just Temperature - March 25, 2012
- Form of Argument: Adventures in Rhetoric - March 9, 2012
- Durban – Conference of Parties – A Ethical Problem: - December 2, 2011
- "BEST" temperature record study surprises skeptics - November 3, 2011
- Climate Case Studies – The 2010 Russian Heat Wave: Risks (2) - October 24, 2011
Further Reading:
- IPCC 4th Assessment, Chapter 5: Observations: Oceanic Climate Change and Sea Level 2007.
- Who ya gonna call?, a RealClimate.org post by Gavin Schmidt and Michael Mann, August, 2007.
- NASA's "A Chilling Possibility" press release, March 2004.
- Abrupt Climate Change: Should we be worried?" Analysis by Woods Hole Oceanographical Institute, January 2003.
- The Great Climate Flip-flop, a 1998 Atlantic Monthly article.
- Abrupt Climate Change, a report prepared by Global Business Network (GBN) for the Department of Defense, October 2003.
- The Two-Mile Time Machine : Ice Cores, Abrupt Climate Change, and Our Future, by Dr. Richard Alley, 2001. An excellent book on the Greenland ice cores findings.
- The Day After Tomorrow: Could it really happen?, a Weather Underground feature article.
No comments:
Post a Comment