Search

Shopping cart

Saved articles

You have not yet added any article to your bookmarks!

Browse articles
Newsletter image

Subscribe to the Newsletter

Join 10k+ people to get notified about new posts, news and tips.

Do not worry we don't spam!

GDPR Compliance

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, Privacy Policy, and Terms of Service.

Could Britain face a winter ice age? How future temperatures could plummet due to climate change

There is a poorly understood but plausible chance winter temperatures could one day plummet in the UK even as global temperatures soar.

An emerging body of research has spotted the risk that climate change could weaken or even collapse a major ocean current that brings heat northwards from the Atlantic into Europe. In the absence of that warm front, Britain would be plunged into a new ice age in winter, battling frozen runways, roads, forests and farmland.

Arctic sea ice would blanket much of Scotland and most of the North Sea down to East Anglia by late winter. Temperatures in London would reach lows of -19C, a staggering 16C colder than lows in the 1800s, before humans began warming the climate.

That's according to a new study published today that has modelled what a collapse of the so-called "AMOC" (Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation), combined with 2C of global warming, would mean for Europe. All scientists know at this stage, more or less, is that the AMOC is less stable than previously thought.

They don't know how likely a collapse is, how quickly it could unfold, and what the precise impacts would be. What they do know, is that if it happens, it would be "quite devastating," said lead author Rene van Westen, from Utrecht University in the Netherlands.

"The AMOC is currently regulating the global climate. And if this shuts down, you will get substantial and drastic climate shifts...

on a planetary scale." It raises difficult and terrifying questions about what kind of climate we should be trying to adapt to. What is the AMOC? Snaking its way around the world, the so-called AMOC plays a crucial role in regulating both the European and global climate by circulating heat via the oceans like a conveyor belt.

But as the climate warms, it dumps more freshwater in the ocean via rainfall and melting ice. This freshwater could slow down the conveyor belt to a point where the system shuts down completely.

Arctic sea ice would creep much further southwards in winter, coating parts of Scandinavia and the Netherlands as well as Britain. What would an AMOC collapse do to Europe? Today's study modelled what it would mean for Europe if the world warmed by around 2C, and the AMOC collapsed.

Edinburgh would in some years see cold extremes of nearly -30°C - almost 23°C colder than in the pre-industrial climate. Once a decade, there would be frost for almost half the days in a year.

In Cardiff, temperatures would reach -19.6C. Meanwhile, sea levels in Europe would rise by 50cm, and rain would fall by 20%.

"The extreme winters would be like living in an ice age," said Professor Tim Lenton, an Exeter University scientist who also researches AMOC. But bizarrely, summer temperatures would not be affected by the AMOC weakening, resulting in cold-hot extremes more common in continental weather systems.

That's because the sea ice would still melt in summer, and the effect of the 2C of warming would kick in. "In extreme years, it would be like coming out of the freezer into a frying pan of summer heatwaves," added Prof Lenton.

"It is hard to over-stress how different a climate this is. Adapting to it would be a monumental challenge." When could this happen? The impacts suggested in this study - published in peer-reviewed journal Geophysical Research Letters - are extreme and there remains a long list of questions.

Scientists don't expect the AMOC to fizzle out this century. And if the world warmed by more like 4C, the warming effect would override the cooling effect of any AMOC collapse.

But Prof Richard Allan from Reading University said it is still "important to test the ground for these unlikely but high impact possibilities, in the same way that we insure our homes against improbable calamity". Although scientists are undecided on whether the AMOC will die out, what they do agree on is that the complexity and weirdness of the climate system is why we should mess with it as little as possible.

Prof Allen added: "Even the mere possibility of this dire storyline unfolding over coming centuries underscores the need to forensically monitor what is happening in our oceans, and to continue building momentum across all sectors of society to cut greenhouse gas emissions which are driving our climate into dangerous, uncharted territory.".

Prev Article
Tech Innovations Reshaping the Retail Landscape: AI Payments
Next Article
The Rise of AI-Powered Personal Assistants: How They Manage

Related to this topic:

Comments

By - Tnews 11 Jun 2025 5 Mins Read
Email : 17

Related Post