
The Gulf Stream is on the verge of COLLAPSING, scientists warn - as they find the first concrete evidence of major ocean circulation system weakening
In the 2004 film 'The Day After Tomorrow', Earth enters a sudden period of flash freezing due to the collapse of the Gulf Stream.
People and buildings are buried under mountains of ice and snow, as freezing cold winds whip vehicles into the air.
Now, a study has revealed that this could soon become a reality.
Scientists from the University of California, Riverside, have warned that the Gulf Stream has been weakening for more than 100 years - and could soon collapse altogether.
The Gulf Stream is only a small part of a much wider system of currents, officially called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC).
Described as 'the conveyor belt of the ocean', AMOC transports warm, salty water near the ocean's surface northwards from the tropics up to the northern hemisphere, keeping Europe, the UK and the US east coast temperate.
Worryingly, if the AMOC does collapse, it could plunge large parts of Europe into a deep freeze - with parts of the UK dropping to as low as -30°C.
'This work shows the AMOC has been weakening for more than a century. That trend is likely to continue if greenhouse gases keep rising,' said Professor Wei Liu, an author of the study.
The researchers point to a strange patch of cold water south of Greenland and Iceland, about 1,000 miles wide, that really shouldn't be there.
Unlike the water surrounding it, this 'stubborn' patch of cold water has resisted global warming for more than a century, long fueling debate amongst scientists.
Now, the new study, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, finally links it to a long-term weakening of the AMOC.
'People have been asking why this cold spot exists; we found the most likely answer is a weakening AMOC,' said lead study author Wei Liu.
Lui and a colleague analysed about 100 years of salinity and temperature data, which can be used to understand the strength of the AMOC.
When the AMOC slows down, less heat and salt reach the North Atlantic, leading to cooler, fresher, less salty surface waters.
From these long-term salinity and temperature records, they reconstructed changes in the circulation system and compared those with nearly 100 different climate models.
They found that only the models simulating a weakened AMOC matched the real-world data – indicating that a weakened AMOC was the only possible cause for the blob.
While previous studies have offered evidence that the AMOC is weakening, this anomalous blob in the Atlantic offers physical, tangible evidence
What is the AMOC?
The Gulf Stream is a small part of a much wider system of currents, officially called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation or AMOC.
Described as 'the conveyor belt of the ocean', it transports warm water near the ocean's surface northwards - from the tropics to the northern hemisphere.
When the warm water reaches the North Atlantic (Europe and the UK, and the US east coast), it releases the heat and then freezes. As this ice forms, salt is left behind in the ocean water.
Due to the large amount of salt in the water, it becomes denser, sinks, and is carried southwards – back towards the tropics – in the depths below.
Eventually, the water gets pulled back up towards the surface and warms up in a process called upwelling, completing the cycle.
Scientists think AMOC brings enough warmth to the northern hemisphere that without it, large parts of Europe could enter a deep freeze.
Professor Li described it as a 'very robust correlation', adding: 'If you look at the observations and compare them with all the simulations, only the weakened-AMOC scenario reproduces the cooling in this one region.'
Until now, some climate scientists had thought the random cool patch south of Greenland has been due to atmospheric factors such as aerosol pollution.
But computer models testing this theory have before now failed to recreate the actual, observed cooling – as these experts have done with the now-proven AMOC theory.
The team say the study strengthens future climate forecasts, especially those concerning Europe, where the influence of the AMOC is most pronounced.
While previous studies have offered evidence that the AMOC is weakening, this anomalous blob in the Atlantic offers physical, tangible evidence.
Professor Liu emphasized the complexity of the AMOC's role in the global climate, but warned what a total collapse of the system could mean.
'The overall impact on ecosystems and weather patterns, both in the Arctic and globally, could still be severe,' he said.
Professor David Thornalley, a climate scientist at University College London who was not involved with the study, said temperatures would plummet if the AMOC collapsed.
'An AMOC collapse could cause more weather extremes, so as well as overall colder-than-average conditions, we also expect that there would be more winter storms caused by stronger westerly winds,' he previously told MailOnline.
Why could the AMOC collapse?
Scientists think melting glaciers could cause the collapse of the AMOC, the system of ocean currents.
Described as 'the conveyor belt of the ocean', the AMOC transports warm water near the ocean's surface northwards – from the tropics up to the northern hemisphere.
Prior studies have already shown that due to climate change, the AMOC is slowing down.
The engine of this conveyor belt is off the coast of Greenland, where, as more ice melts from climate change , more freshwater flows into the North Atlantic and slows everything down.
'Unfortunately people would die due to stronger winter storms and flooding, and many old and young would be vulnerable to the very cold winter temperatures.'
In the UK, the effects could be 'minor' compared with elsewhere around the world, Professor Thornalley added.
'A collapse in AMOC would cause a shift in the tropical rainfall belt which would massively disrupt agriculture and water supplies across huge swathes of the globe,' he said.
'Many millions would be affected and suffer from drought, famine and flooding, in countries that are already struggling to deal with these issues. There would be huge numbers of climate refugees, geopolitical tensions would rise.'
Jonathan Bamber, a professor of Earth observation at the University of Bristol, agreed that if the AMOC were to collapse, the climate of northwest Europe would be 'unrecognisable compared to what it is today'.
'It would be several degrees cooler so that winters would be more typical of Arctic Canada and precipitation would decrease also,' he told MailOnline. 'Very harsh, cold winters would certainly be a threat to life.'
In 'The Day After Tomorrow', a collapse of the AMOC takes place over a matter of days and the fictional weather immediately switches to extreme cold.
Thankfully, such a rapid transition will not happen in real life, said Penny Holliday, head of marine physics and ocean circulation at the National Oceanography Centre in Southampton.
'If the AMOC does reach a tipping point it will happen over several decades at least,' she told MailOnline.
'However a slowdown of the AMOC, whether it is fast-acting or takes place over many decades, will lead to the generation of more extreme and violent weather systems that have the potential to cause deaths and major damage.'
Last week, another team of scientists reported temperatures could plunge to -30°C in Scotland if the AMOC collapsed, with Edinburgh spending nearly half of the year with a minimum temperature of below 0°C.
London, meanwhile, would experience cold extremes of -19°C and record over two months' worth of additional days with sub-zero temperatures compared to the late 19th century.
Is 'The Day After Tomorrow' an accurate portrayal of the future?
Paleoclimate records constructed from Greenland ice cores have revealed that AMOC circulation has, indeed, shut down in the past and caused regional climate change, according to the University of Illinois.
It caused the area around Greenland to cool by 44 degrees Fahrenheit.
In the 2004 film 'The Day After Tomorrow,' New York City's temperature dramatically dropped to a point that a deep freeze appeared within a day.
Even a second outside and the movie's characters would freeze to death.
Scientists say the film plays up the shift, which would take decades to see, but note temperatures would dramatically decrease along the eastern US coast.
Winters would become colder and storms more frequent that would linger longer throughout the year if the AMOC would come to a halt today.
However, scientist say it isn't the cold temperatures that we should prepare for, it will be the rise in sea levels that will have the largest impact.
The increase would be caused by water piling up along the east coast that would have been pushed away by the northward surface flow.
But with AMOC weakened, or at a stop, experts say sea levels around the North Atlantic Basin could experience a rise up to nearly 20 inches.
This would eventually push people living along the coast from their homes and further inland to escape flooding.
A weakened AMOC would also decrease the amount of rainfalls in the North Atlantic that would cause intense droughts in areas that rarely experience such events.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
How AI could save the broken NHS
Illustrations by Andreion De Castro You might be frustrated by your recent run-in with a customer service bot but when it comes to healthcare, there's good reason to suggest that a wave of new AI tools could represent hope for our creaking health service, slashing backlogs and catching diseases years or even decades earlier, lengthening lives in the process. This doesn't mean that your GP or consultant will soon be replaced by a silicon droid; the human element of healthcare will still be very much present. But, behind the scenes, AI is slowly beginning to reveal its prowess. Last month, Health Secretary Wes Streeting announced that a new AI-powered blood test to detect cancer will be trialled on the NHS. Called miONCO-Dx, it can detect early warning signs of 12 of the most lethal cancers through identifying worrying traces of tiny molecules called microRNAs, which can change the activity of genes. Proponents of AI's uses in healthcare often describe these tools as either 'a second set of eyes' or 'augmenting what a human doctor can do,' with Colin Rees, Professor of Gastroenterology at Newcastle University saying that he's enormously optimistic about their potential to limit preventable deaths. 'I think AI is going to transform healthcare like almost nothing else ever,' he says. 'Just in diagnostics, it's able to spot new patterns, look at blood tests and scans with a fresh perspective and, of course, it doesn't get tired or make mistakes.' Already, AI is beginning to make a difference in disease-prevention for a broad range of conditions, from early detection of osteoporosis to helping overstretched radiologists prioritise which patients to examine first. Let's take a closer look at what's happening right now, how technology may affect different diseases and common conditions, and what's likely to come later down the line. Lungs Since early 2022, a growing number of NHS Trusts across the UK have been using tools developed by a company called to accelerate analysis of the many millions of chest X-rays taken every year. With the UK currently suffering from a chronic shortage of radiologists – the latest data suggests that the NHS has 30 per cent fewer radiologists than it requires – AI has been trying to pick up the slack. In particular, according to CEO and co-founder Dr Aengus Tran, one of the goals has been to slash the time taken to diagnose cases of lung cancer – one of the most common cancers in the UK. 'The NHS has procured our AI across 131 hospitals to essentially run our system over chest X-rays, to see if the AI can find signs of cancer; perhaps subtle signs which might have been missed,' says Dr Tran. 'And if that's the case, those patients will be escalated to the very top of the list.' The early signs are promising. Data collected from NHS Grampian, in Scotland, suggests that the tool has increased the proportion of lung cancers identified at earlier stages by nearly a third, and the technology is now taking on an even wider remit. Because tools are capable of diagnosing more than 130 different lung-related conditions, from rib fractures to pneumonia to an enlarged heart, some NHS hospitals are already using them to work through their backlog of uninterpreted scans and help prioritise the most urgent cases. 'It means that patients with life-threatening illness and critical conditions are being seen sooner,' says Dr Tran. 'So, for example, in [hospitals in] Manchester, we're seeing that cases of pneumothorax [a collapsed lung] get flagged within less than a day, whereas previously that would have taken five or more days to get to.' Heart More than 1.5 million people in the UK have atrial fibrillation, a condition characterised by sporadic bursts of an irregular heartbeat. This can have serious long-term consequences, as blood can begin to collect within the heart, forming clots which can then travel to the brain. As a result, people with atrial fibrillation are also more at risk of suffering a stroke. The problem, according to Rameen Shakur, a clinical cardiologist and Professor of Genomics & Precision Cardiovascular Medicine at the University of Brighton, is that many of these cases go undetected (an estimated 270,000 people in the UK have undiagnosed atrial fibrillation) because patients do not always present with symptoms when being examined in hospital. To address this, Prof Shakur created a company called Cambridge Heartwear, which has designed a wearable monitor called Heartsense that records patient's heart rhythms to medical grade standard and checks for signs of atrial fibrillation using inbuilt AI algorithms. The device has since been tested in a clinical trial at a NHS hospital in Worthing, and Prof Shakur is hopeful that it can help to prevent some of the 100,000 strokes that occur each year in the UK alone. 'Once you find out that someone has atrial fibrillation, they can be prescribed anticoagulants [blood thinners] to reduce stroke risk, but that treatment is wholly dependent on catching it and getting a diagnosis,' he says. 'The advantage of this device is that it's discrete and malleable enough that you don't feel it. You can wear it while you're having a shower, when you're sleeping, when you're running to catch a bus – all times when an episode of atrial fibrillation might occur.' Gut Earlier this year, the NHS began offering biennial bowel screening to all people aged between 50 and 74, with the aim of detecting and preventing more cases of bowel cancer. According to Prof Rees, the health service now carries out around 700,000 colonoscopy examinations – where a person's bowel is examined using a small camera – every year. As well as scanning for tumours, one of the aims of this procedure is to identify tiny precancerous warts called polyps, and remove them before they develop into anything more sinister. However, spotting polyps is not always straightforward. 'It requires a lot of concentration,' says Prof Rees. 'The bowel has got lots of folds in it, the large bowel is about a metre long and it has lots of blind spots. And there's very good evidence that missing these things leads to more patients developing cancer.' To address this issue, Prof Rees recently led a pioneering trial in which gastroenterologists carrying out colonoscopies were given the additional assistance of an AI tool called GI Genius, which had been trained to spot abnormalities within the bowel using powerful neural networks. 'It scans the image which the specialist is looking at on a screen through their scope,' says Prof Rees. 'If it spots an abnormality, it flags it and puts a green box around it. I think of it as being a little bit like spellcheck in Microsoft Word.' The trial, which involved more than 2,000 patients across 10 NHS Trusts, was successful: 30 per cent more polyps were detected, particularly a form of polyp which is quite notoriously difficult to spot via the naked eye alone. 'We call them sessile serrated polyps,' says Prof Rees. 'They're smaller, flatter polyps but they account for 30 per cent of bowel cancers, so they're particularly dangerous, and we found a significant increase in the detection of these bad guys.' Bones For many people in their 50s, a twinge of back pain might be dismissed as a sign of encroaching old age, but, in some cases, it could be a spinal fracture, which represents an early warning sign of degenerative bone disease. When detected early, osteoporosis – a condition which causes the bones to become weaker and more fragile – is highly treatable. Now a new collaboration between academics, doctors, Royal Osteoporosis Society and the company is investigating whether the company's technology can pinpoint potentially tell-tale fracture signs. It could mean that, in future, whenever people in their 50s or 60s receive a CT scan, it will automatically be fed through AI technology to check for hints of osteoporosis. Eyes Can Google help prevent one of the most common causes of blindness? An ongoing partnership between Google Health, AI company DeepMind and Moorfields Eye Hospital is attempting to achieve just that through an AI system that aims to predict patients at particularly high risk of age-related macular degeneration – a condition caused by a progressive loss of cells in the retina – with the aim of identifying candidates for preventative treatment. Because the eye acts as a window to the brain, other AI tools are being developed with the aim of detecting early signs of brain tumours or neurological diseases like Parkinson's, multiple sclerosis and Alzheimer's. According to Dr Siegfried Wagner of the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Hospital, AI can detect signs of multiple sclerosis through an asymmetry which only becomes apparent when scanning the left and right eyes. He predicts that in the future, such patients could be immediately referred for an MRI scan to investigate further. 'One eye might look completely normal, but AI can pick up a subtle thinning or thickening in the retinal nerve fibres of the other eye,' says Dr Wagner. 'It happens because in multiple sclerosis you get multiple small lesions in the brain, and they're more in one half of the brain than the other. So, you're seeing a reflection of what's happening in the brain, but in the eye.' Brain One of the biggest hopes for AI is that it could find a way to predict early warning signs for dementia many years before the onset of symptoms. Indeed, Will Whiteley, Professor of Neurology and Epidemiology at the University of Edinburgh, and a consultant neurologist in NHS Lothian, is leading a major new project to try to train an AI model to do just that, using a bank of CT and MRI scans collected through patients in Scotland over the course of 10 years. 'Right now, neurologists look for shrinkage in parts of the brain called the temporal lob, which are particularly responsible for memory, and a sign of Alzheimer's disease,' says Prof Whiteley. ' Vascular dementia affects the small vessels of the brain, and you can see that on a brain scan, too. But I hope that with these very powerful and flexible AI models, they'll be doing more, finding new things that we hadn't thought of as humans. We're not there yet, but wouldn't it be great if in future all 50-year-olds could take a test to tell you about your risk of dementia and whether you should or shouldn't take a medicine to prevent you getting it in later life?'


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
Bat with rabies-like virus found on Isle of Wight
An injured bat that was rescued from a back garden turned out to have an extremely rare, rabies-like virus, the Department for Environment and Rural Affairs has animal was found earlier this month in Shorwell on the Isle of resident picked it up wearing gloves and kept it in a shoebox overnight, while waiting for it to be collected by volunteers from Isle of Wight Bat for Environment and Rural Affairs (Defra) said the bat was later found to have a virus that caused rabies, known as European Bat Lyssavirus-1 (EBLV-1) - but Defra said other mammals were not considered to be at risk. Animal, Plant and Health Agency (APHA) said it investigated and found no scratches or bites to humans or are two types of viruses that cause rabies carried in bats in the UK - EBLV-1 and EBLV-2. Both are extremely rare in the UK and their presence does not change the UK's status as a rabies-free country, according to Defra. EBLVs cause the rabies disease but they are not the classical rabies virus associated with dogs and responsible for most rabies cases worldwide, according to the Bat Conservation Trust. Alex Morss, from the trust, said: "Rabies-related viruses have only ever been recorded in less than 0.3% of all bats tested since 1986 (59 bats of 19,000 tested), and in only two of the 18 bat species present in the UK, the serotine bat and the Daubenton's bat."He added: "There have only been two recorded cases of rabies viruses from an infected wild British animal in a human in Britain since records began - One case was in 1902, the other case was in 2002."European Bat Lyssavirus-1 (EBLV-1) has been detected in Serotine bats since 2018, with the first case being found in Dorset, according to APHA. As of May 2024, 34 cases of EBLV-1 had been reported in the UK, according to research from the University of Surrey and APHA. Legally protected Mr Morss said anyone who suspected they had been licked, bitten or scratched by a bat should contact the National Bat Helpline - 0345 1300 228 - and seek immediate medical assistance. Vaccinations provided soon after exposure are 100% effective in preventing the disease, according to the NHS. "There is no risk to human health if you do not handle British bats, even if they are roosting in buildings you use, Mr Morss said. "No action should be taken to disturb or harm any wild bats or their roosts."Bats are non-aggressive, shy mammals and will avoid contact with humans."All 18 British bat species and their roosts are legally protected. Mr Morss said bats should only ever be handled by a person with a licence and after appropriate training, unless a bat in distress is being rescued, in which case thick gloves and a face mask or covering should be worn.


BBC News
3 hours ago
- BBC News
Vera Rubin: First pictures taken by world's largest digital camera released
The first images captured by the world's most powerful telescope have been photos were taken by the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) camera located at an observatory in the south American country of show the night sky in extraordinary detail, capturing clouds of gas and dust that are several thousand light years away. Scientists are due to reveal more pictures and videos taken by the camera this week. What's the latest? Scientists say the images reveal breathtaking views of star-forming regions as well as distant of the debut images is made up of 678 exposures taken over just seven shows the Trifid Nebula and the Lagoon Nebula - both located several thousand light-years from Earth, glowing in bright pinks against orange-red image reveals these nebulae within our Milky Way in great detail, with previously faint or invisible features now clearly image shows a view of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies, which is about 100 billion times the size of the Milky shows lots of bright stars in the foreground, as well as many galaxies in the aim to photograph the night sky every three days for ten years to show how stars and galaxies move and change over time. What is the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) camera? According to the Guinness Book of Records, the LSST is not only the largest digital camera but also the one with the highest resolution, which means it can take really detailed top-of-the-range phones have cameras with a resolution of up to 50 megapixels, whereas the LSST has a resolution of 3,200 you definitely can't carry this camera around with you. It's about the same size as a small car and weighs a massive 2, it is kept at the Vera C Rubin Observatory in Chile, attached to a powerful mountaintop location provides dark skies and dry air, which are ideal conditions for observing the images it will capture are so large that it would take 400 ultra-high-definition televisions to display one of them at full camera aims to take 1,000 images a night over the next 10 years and the project's mission is to catalogue 20 billion goal is to capture an ultra-wide and ultra-high-definition time-lapse record of our say the observatory will transform our understanding of the captured will help scientists answer questions about dark matter, the structure of the Milky Way and the formation of our Solar also think that if a ninth planet exists in our solar system, the telescope would find it in its first year.