The article discusses the growing concerns of climate physicist Peter Ditlevsen regarding the potential collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a critical ocean circulation system.
Ditlevsen, while building a house in the Danish countryside, was preoccupied with the looming threat of global catastrophes that could make even the most sensational Hollywood disaster films seem tame in comparison. His focus was on the AMOC's tipping point, the same phenomenon dramatized in the film "The Day After Tomorrow," which depicted superstorms, climate upheavals, and a frozen New York City.
The AMOC is a vast network of deep and surface flows that not only moves warm and cold water between the poles but also shapes regional weather, the water cycle, and global food security. Ditlevsen, with a sense of urgency, coded a model of the AMOC, refining calculations from his former collaborator, Niklas Boers. He treated the AMOC as a tipping point system, indicating that it could reach a critical threshold within the next 23 years, potentially leading to catastrophic consequences.
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by Ricky Lanuss... um medium.com 08-22-2024
https://medium.com/the-new-climate/are-we-only-23-years-away-from-the-atlantic-oceans-tipping-point-0401126505f8Tiefere Fragen