
After record heat, could the Atlantic make Britain's weather even more extreme?
After record heat, could the Atlantic make Britain's weather even more extreme?Published6 minutes agoByJustin Rowlatt Climate EditorSomewhere in the stormy waters off Greenland, a bright yellow robotic probe, known as...
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A significant story is unfolding on the international scene. After record heat, could the Atlantic make Britain's weather even more extreme? Published6 minutes agoByJustin Rowlatt Climate EditorSomewhere in the stormy waters off Greenland, a bright yellow robotic probe, known as an Argo float, is sinking silently beneath the waves. It is roughly the size of a person, with a tough metal body and an array of sensors packed inside.
The float is part of a global effort to solve one of the great mysteries of the ocean: how its hidden movements help shape the climate above. There is no crew, no one steering it. Instead, it drifts with the currents, measuring temperature, the amount of salt in the water and pressure as it moves through the waves.
The Details
When it rises, it briefly breaks the surface and sends its data home by satellite. Then it does it all again. Dive, drift, measure, surface, transmit.
The question those floats are helping investigate is one of the most important - and most contested - in climate science: whether one of the world's great systems of ocean currents is beginning to change. It is called the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC - a vast, north-south system of currents that carries warm surface water towards the Arctic and returns colder water thousands of miles south through the deep ocean. Image source, ArgoImage caption, The Argo float is part of a global network collecting data to help scientists understand how ocean currents shape Earth's climateBut scientists say the AMOC is under pressure.
Most agree it is likely to weaken as the planet warms. The UK government has said that, as "a key component within the Earth's climate system" the AMOC contributes to the UK's long-term climate risks. The disagreement is over how much and how fast the current could change, what that would mean for the weather and crucially, whether the seasons we know today could begin to change.
What Experts Say
A current under pressureThe question matters because the AMOC is part of a vast heat-moving system that influences the climate far beyond the Atlantic. But for the UK and north-west Europe, its influence is much closer to home: it helps shape the climate we live in and the weather we get. The tropics receive far more energy from the sun than the poles.
That imbalance sets both the air and the ocean in motion. Winds, storms, rainfall and currents are all, in different ways, the planet trying to even out that difference. The UK sits in the middle of that exchange.
Heat released from the Atlantic feeds into the air above it, helping fuel storms, steer winds and influence the pressure systems that reach north-west Europe. So, if the ocean changes, the weather can change too. That includes a possibility that might seem bizarre in a warming world: changes in the Atlantic could bring more extreme swings in the UK's weather, including colder winters, even as average global temperatures continue to rise.
The story has become one of the most prominent items on the global agenda.





