Potential AMOC Collapse Declared an ‘Existential Threat’ by Iceland

IN NEWS: Potential AMOC Collapse Declared an ‘Existential Threat’ by Iceland


ANALYSIS

1. Why AMOC Is in the News

  • Iceland has formally declared the potential collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) as a national security and existential threat, according to Reuters.
  • This marks the first instance of a climate-specific phenomenon being presented to Iceland’s National Security Council as an existential threat.

2. Significance of AMOC for Europe

  • AMOC drives warm tropical waters toward the Arctic, ensuring milder winters in Europe.
  • A collapse could bring:
    • Modern-day ice-age-like conditions in northern Europe
    • Harsh, prolonged winters
    • Increased ice and snow
    • Severe disruptions to food security, energy systems, and maritime transport

3. Indicators of AMOC Weakening

  • Accelerated Greenland ice sheet melting is a key driver behind AMOC slowdown.
  • Scientists indicate collapse could occur at any time between early and late 21st century.
  • As a climate tipping element, AMOC may undergo irreversible transformation once a threshold is crossed.

4. Scientific Findings

  • Nature Communications (2023):
    • AMOC monitored continuously since 2004 via moored instruments, submarine cable electrical currents, and satellites.
    • Decline seen from 2004–2012; long-term SST (1870–2020) suggests early warning signs since 1970.
    • Estimated AMOC transition window: 2037–2109.
  • Potsdam Institute Report (Aug 28, 2025):
    • Deep overturning severely slows by 2100 and shuts down beyond it under high-emission pathways; possible also under intermediate or low-emission scenarios.
    • Expected impacts:
      • Extreme winter events in northwestern Europe
      • Summer drying
      • Shifts in tropical rainfall belts
  • Nature (Feb 2025):
    • Calls for improved understanding of Southern Ocean and Indo-Pacific circulations.
    • Suggests AMOC could be more resilient than earlier predictions, reducing likelihood of immediate collapse but confirming ongoing weakening.

5. National Responses

  • Iceland:
    • Ministries preparing for:
      • Food insecurity
      • Energy generation and distribution challenges
      • Impacts on sea transport
    • Work initiated on a disaster-preparedness policy.
  • Norway:
    • Conducting additional research before classifying AMOC as a national security risk.

6. Historical Perspective

  • The last AMOC collapse occurred before the last ice age, preceding the rise of agriculture and settled civilisation.

STATIC PORTION (Essential Concepts)

Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC)

  • A large-scale system of ocean currents circulating heat globally.
  • Key functions:
    • Moderating temperatures in Europe
    • Influencing monsoon and rainfall patterns
    • Balancing global heat distribution

Climate Tipping Points

  • Thresholds leading to irreversible, self-perpetuating changes in Earth systems.
  • AMOC is one of Earth’s major identified tipping elements.

Subpolar Gyre

  • A North Atlantic current system whose sea surface temperature patterns serve as AMOC stability indicators.

Early Warning Signals

  • Loss of resilience
  • Increased variability in ocean temperature
  • Slower recovery from disturbances

Updated – 13 Nov 2025 ; 06:00 PM | News Source: Down to Earth