Dying Gulf Stream may trigger a global nightmare

File photo: The Gulf Stream waters
flow in somewhat parallel layers, slicing across what is otherwise a
fairly turbulent western North Atlantic Ocean in this image collected by
the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite on NASA-NOAA's Suomi NPP
satellite March 9, 2016, and released April 5, 2016. The turbulence is
made visible by the pigmented phytoplankton it entrains, according to a
NASA news release. Picture taken March 9, 2016.
(REUTERS/NASA/NOAA/Handout)
The culprit is apparently melting sea ice and glaciers, which inject fresh water into the North Atlantic and weaken the stream. "Fiddling with [the Gulf Stream] is very dangerous, because you may well trigger some surprises," says climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf.
"I wish I knew where this critical tipping point is, but that is unfortunately just what we don’t know." If the stream dies, scientists say, its equatorial heat would stop reaching the North Atlantic—plunging Europe into bone-numbing winters and affecting weather worldwide.
Even subtler changes "could wreak havoc" on the Atlantic Ocean's "delicate ecosystems," Smithsonian reports. The studies differ in approach and timeline but both say the Gulf Stream has diminished by about 15%, Nature reports.
One study spotted it by measuring sediment on the ocean floor and says the problem began when the Little Ice Age subsided around 1850. The other, which analyzed sea surface temperatures combined with advanced climate simulations, says the decline started around 50 years ago.
But both see human-influenced climate change as a cause, Nature says. And with Greenland's huge ice cap melting at a historic rate, some say the Paris climate agreement is our only hope.
"If we can keep the temperature rise to well below 2C as agreed in the Paris agreement, I think we run a small risk of crossing this collapse tipping point," says Rahmstorf.
(Meanwhile the Doomsday Clock has ticked 30 seconds closer to "midnight.")
This article originally appeared on Newser: Dying Gulf Stream May Trigger a Global Nightmare
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