Has the AMOC gone Amuck? YES… Investigate this Yourself!! Please donate to PaulBeckwith.net to support my research and videos joining the dots on abrupt climate system mayhem. I look at Earth Nullschool and Climate Reanalyzer to answer this question. The answer seems to be YES, with profound implications for our climate, even today… I teach you how to analyze this yourself… Earth Nullschool Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly (SSTA): earth.nullschool.net/ Earth Nullschool Jet Stream behaviour: earth.nullschool.net/ Climate Reanalyzer 2 m air temperature: climatereanalyzer.org/wx/todays-weather/?var_id=t2anom&ortho=1&wt=1 Climate Reanalyzer Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly: climatereanalyzer.org/wx/todays-weather/?var_id=sstanom&ortho=1&wt=1 Wikipedia AMOC: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantic_meridional_overturning_circulation Please donate to PaulBeckwith.net to support my research and videos joining the dots on abrupt climate system mayhem.
@Mike-zx1kx
20 күн бұрын
You pointed to the arm of the Gulfstream going towards Iceland. I am not sure that are where the big (biggest) issue is. Please note that the Greenland gyre SHOULD be an engine for the current (conversion) at the tip of Greenland where a huge underwater canyon are where the warm salt water and the cold fresh from the melt form the engine in a patterned cycle, that normally are estimated to take 8000 years. HOWEVER, the last many years of increased melt and warmer water could indicate, that this part of the engine are on the brink of collapse as well. IF the melt, so to speak, overflow the pot (underwater Greenland canyon, the Greenland gyre) that too could push the Gulfstream conversion point back below the UK coastline, instead of taking place at the tip of Greenland, or maybe even further. I saw an interview with an Icelandic scientist tonight, that said the measurements of waters around Iceland and Faeroe Islands related to the Gulfstream, did not show any major changes, unlike what have been the case when it comes to the other arm of the Gulfstream that goes via UK with hot water up to the Greenlandic gyre returning with colder. I personally believe the danger for a stoppage and/or repositioning, would be related to the 2/3 part of the warmer Gulfstream water going towards Greenland. That streams hot water and returning cold are more "focused/concentrated/distinct" in it´s nature than the more "diluted" other arm as far as I can make out. Greenland, that are where the big melt takes place, rather than the other arm going towards Norwegian coastline and Faeroe islands/Iceland. Note that the higher measured temperatures and slowing flow are data results of pods measuring along the Gulfstream path along UK waters primarily. I am not aware if Norway have separate measurements along their waters (with all their oil exploration and research in own waters I would assume they have but do not know for a fact and thus also not able to provide any scientific data from it) but they also have seen effects from global warming as their seed vault seems to need cooling elements soon. Anyway, if you look at your own clip at 1:09 you can see the very cold spot at tip of Greenland and the warmer water going close to Canada and some even seem to go nearly all the way towards the pole via waters between Canada and Greenland, that´s whats killing the usually perma ocean based ice sheet there but it are not normal IMO, the warmer water and the cold at the tip should be meeting each other a bit more head on and that it do not indicate to me that the melt have "taken over dominance" thus forcing the warmer waters of that arm of the Gulfstreams warmer water up into the strait instead of being part of the normal " heat exchange" conversion engine. If the cold melted water have filled the pot the warmer are thus not able to enter the canyon but are deflected sideways instead. I hope you understand what I mean. I hope my 5 cents provided useful input/understanding.
@synthdriver8817
20 күн бұрын
Hey Paul, I've noticed flora are getting noticeably more yellow. Could you do a video covering global flora health?
@GhostOnTheHalfShell
20 күн бұрын
Honest, mastering how to pronounce the thing is half the battle discussing it.
@Randy778
19 күн бұрын
The pattern is changing- yes- but it´s not going to "shut down" since that´s what historic models seem to indicate as far as i know. Also you´d have more evaporation over warmer ocean so increase in salinity elsewhere thus a different pattern overall. What this means and how this changes those large scale (emergent behaviours) is unknown, right? Especially since we don´t have real time data thus lack "granularity information" to make informed decisions. The ocean currents are a comparably huge mass and it´d take a long way to slow the current impulse to a standstill thus - yes trouble´s on the horizon but we cannot know for shure in what way. In essence our "climate attractor"´s transforming due to man made climate change but we cannot know how the new pattern´ll look like.
@Mike-zx1kx
19 күн бұрын
@@Randy778 Sorry but It´s very hard to make much sense of what you write. Let me try to correct things you seem to misunderstand. As more melting ice goes into the oceans salinity in general ought to go down as the melting ice comes from fresh water rain/snow.. When water evaporation happens from our waters, no matter if from fresh or salt water, it will eventually fall as fresh water rain. The salt molecules are heavier/binding, thus the evaporation are as fresh water. There are real time data coming from an increasing amount of human deployed pods, that either are stationary or floating with the streams, just as there are more and more real time data satellites. The pods and satellites data are recorded/accumulated and thus can bring the many many overview pictures and diagrams as Paul show in the clip. It are to a high degree a larger amount of pods placed by UK scientists outside, and along their coastline where Gulfstream passes, that have made us aware of the fast rising temperature in the Gulfstream there, just as the slower flow/speed have been documented. One of the reasons for putting out these pods, where the indications coming from satellites and data from Greenland. Many have been very surprised that since these pods began to be placed out, the heating only have increased (5 C+) while flow have slowed (15%). So some data from space and land caused further real time data studies to be made (still are done), causing even more real time data to be gathered. Not all real time data gathered are shared in real time but that´s another issue. I cannot understand what you mean by "granularity information to make informed decision" but let me just state that we know that abrupt changes in temperatures, flows and patterns can have profound consequences. As an example it are recognised the warm Gulfstream are a key reason for the tempered, 4 season climate in Northern Europe. Should that stream´s convection point abruptly be moved from Greenland to, say hundreds kilometres before reaching UK or more, somewhere in the Atlantic, a lot indicates that that then would cause considerably colder climate in Northern Europe, maybe even initiate a localised ice age.Deeply impact farming and fishstocks but would also likely cause "Sahara like" temperatures in the Americas and bring heat/fuel to "monster" hurricanes in same areas, due to even more extreme heat in the ocean than we see now, where they already grow in numbers and size. It are highly unlikely that the entire thermohaline system will come to a standstill, as you write, but it may profoundly change patterns. Physics will be at play and a convection between warm/cold water will take place but it may profoundly change the conditions for global weather patterns causing extremes. Sudden profound changes in the thermohaline system, in Gulfstream or elsewhere, will abruptly cause "toptuned" human farming, that currently are able to feed over 8 billion people, to fail. Fast oceanic currents changes thus can lead to fast changes in the conditions for life, human/non human and faunas ability to survive. As a thought experiment you could try to relate to failed harvests in Northern Europe (due to extreme colds) and failed harvests in the Americas (due to extreme heat combined with loads of powerful hurricanes). These areas today produce harvests that exceeds own populations demand thus a real risk of going to a state where they cannot export nor feed themselves could easily be the "over night" result. These are monetary strong areas so most likely others that will end up not eating. A great chance of large amounts of fish dying due to extreme changes in water temperature should also be expected. You are correct that we cannot precisely predict how a re-configuring of ocean currents would look like but the things we can relate to and have tried to predict through models, paints a very grim picture. What we CAN relate to and SHOULD do NOW are removing the root cause. The insanity in continuing in burning fossil fuels that keeps getting the atmospheric and oceanic carbon content to go up (!) despite our certain knowledge that this behaviour WILL come with profound changes as climate tipping points trigger. We NOW have ALL the knowledge and solutions to transition to an emission free energy production and usage and WE, as humanity globally, should immediately consider this our generations "Apollo program" and aim to become carbon emission free in a decade AND add carbon capture technics, then MAYBE, we have a fighting chance to not bring ourselves to catastrophe after catastrophe coming years. We HAVE to cool down the planet again and ONLY way to do that are getting the carbon content in our atmosphere down and ONLY way to do that are an emission free energy production and usage. THAT SIMPLE! Nations like Australia, USA, Canada, Russia today SUBSIDISES fossil fuel thus even preventing the free market, that organically could spread cheaper solutions, like windmills, a lot faster, WE are the monkey generation!🙈🙉🙊
@mirandakoggan3914
20 күн бұрын
Millions of people in this country but only 118 watching this video. Is the population in denial what is coming at us?
@williamtomkiel8215
20 күн бұрын
yep! it's a world wide government failure to lead. no one single country can do all that needs to be done witout becoming vulnerable to predatory exploitation. preventing world wide panic and hoarding of resources in the face of complete human extinction slowly and painfully is the order of , maybe not today, but - tomorrow
@Roy-mw5js
20 күн бұрын
You overestimate the intelligence of humans😊
@effervescentrelief
20 күн бұрын
Uh... they have no clue if the MSM didn't tell them.
@demontrader1222
20 күн бұрын
Consider this...Andrew Tate who runs a business selling courses on how to become an online pimp has a high viewership than Paul, vastly so, and is a celebrity.
@marcsimard2723
20 күн бұрын
Here is what I know: my wife is aware of the horror that is happening in Gaza She doesn’t want to know more There is nothing she can do about it and she has a living to earn Nobody alive right now is either willing to do something or able Giving everone else some slack about this is the only philosophically adequate attitude to have
@Livingthewild
20 күн бұрын
If reality was popular/profitable, Paul could be on CNN and living high on the hog. Thanks, Paul.
@paulrun111
18 күн бұрын
Wtf ... CNN, the biggest joke of a "news" channel
@user-pv9tl4wz5l
20 күн бұрын
I am UK and we have not had a summer. The Alarming thing is the North Atlantic Cold Blob is actually off the coast of the UK.
@universalflame7996
19 күн бұрын
here in sth east queensland there's been a very short winter cold spell, a few weeks only, and now up to 7 degrees warmer than usual for this time of year and heading to 32 in a couple days however summer as such not due until november
@Yorkshireasaurus
19 күн бұрын
Really? I’m in East Midlands and this summer and also last year has been poor with mainly cloud cover lasting weeks. Yes it’s been better the last couple of weeks but on the whole not as sunny as usual.
@byrnemeister2008
19 күн бұрын
Come on guys. We have had 2 nice days so far!! LOL. Yes, straight from spring to autumn with no summer.
@ianseaweed
19 күн бұрын
On the Atlantic coast the weather here in Cornwall the last three years have been erratic. Hard to tell if it’s anomalous AMOC yet, but…. Summer of 2022 we had two long heatwaves and the coastal sea temperature was the high end of normal normal 17.8°C. During 2022 the low pressure systems were typically for the year, less intense in summer and tracked a more normal path up over the top of the British Isles with the jet stream, the winter was colder than usual and had much less rainfall than usual. 2023 started pretty normal except the winter had less rainfall so hose pipe bans in place from the start of June to end of September. The anomaly was the jet stream just got fixed in place over the UK and every low pressure went straight over the British Isles, lots of North Westerlies and lots of rain all summer and Winter. The sea temperature went higher than normal at 19°C, we usually max out at 18° on a hot year, I surfed in board shorts that summer. 2024 has continued with the jet stream stuck in this anomalous path over the British Isles. Very wet and windy year so far with the jet stream sometimes splitting with a strand going south over the Iberian Peninsula. What has been particularly unusual this July and August is how deep the low pressure systems have been dropping down to, 965mb to 970mb on three in a row, we don’t usually have those until later in the autumn. Big Atlantic swells with onshore winds, only one flat day, very unusual. The only normal thing has been sea temperatures being the average 17.5°C this August. If this pattern sticks for the next few years it would be extremely worrying, and that cold blob off Greenland has been there for a number of years now…
@faithhope5833
19 күн бұрын
Virginia USA, we’ve had a nice week of low to mid 70’s. Feelis like beginning of Fall weather but since we moved here in 2020 it doesn’t cool down till late October maybe even November.
@lisad6106
16 күн бұрын
I moved to the Florida Keys almost 15 years ago. The first thing I had to learn is nothing is static as everything is in constant motion. Coming from the mainland where everything is static and you could fill up a planner three months in advance, this was a very hard lesson. The second thing I had to learn was if you try to hold onto anything down here it will literally kill you. I finally related the energy to the relentless coming and going of the tides. It is about the only thing you can count on and even though tides are higher in autumn and lower in the spring, the coming and going of the ocean stays steady. I think humanity had stepped too far away from the natural world and now that we are starting to pay sporadic attention through wildly available data we are shocked. I'm 62. I ran across an old photo of my mother holding me as a baby with the Seven Mile Bridge in the background. The water level on those piers supporting the bridge was the same in that photo as it is today. The point is, the natural world is a state of destructive creation. Where something grows something else it must compensate that growth with decay. Until this information age came upon us, this was general knowledge and accepted as normal. In my short fifteen years living so close to the earth while at the mercy of the ocean I have learned to adapt naturally to the constant change and appreciate the remarkable genius at play. Every day is a wonder in my own life. This place has changed me in so many ways but most profoundly it has made me brave as I was forced align with my daily survival. If we can stop for a moment, and imagine for a second maybe Earth, as old and wise as she is, knows what she's doing. Maybe we ourselves, as spiritual inhabitants, need to be pondered and explored with such vigor. Possibly, what we are missing in the data is our own experience of the magic of life itself. We can limit our consumption through creation while simultaneously releasing a need to overcome forces we're yet to fully understand by learning to embrace the beauty lent to us in the process. The ever unrelenting process of life where our experience is merely a glimpse into a miraculous unfolding we have so little to do with other than our daily survival within the rhythmic tides of creation and destruction.
@billyjoesmo8251
9 күн бұрын
The water tide level raised 8 inches since you were a baby🎉 you can confirm this on Google
@HoserEh82
20 күн бұрын
In my non-proffesional opinion, yes the AMOC is gone amok. Speaking to your mention of the cold patch of water between the Gulf of Alaska and Russia, I have been enjoying and using nullschool website and noticed that aforementioned cold blob has been growing since 2020 and a general change in the Kyrushio current. Also I work on the ocean in PNW of Canada and have noticed more heat in the ocean with it impacting my industry (oyster farms) negatively, to the point where oyster farms are going further north looking for cooler water. We live in interesting times friends, Perhaps that 2050 estimate for amoc collapse is a bit late.
@etienne8110
19 күн бұрын
It s just margin of probability of this event happening. 90% sure it will happen by 2050. Doesn t mean it can t be in the 23% chance to happen by 2035.... Just that scientifically it s better to have a 90% confidence margin rather than a 20% one when predicting something 😅
@HoserEh82
19 күн бұрын
@@etienne8110 A sobering response, I hope my uneducated guess is found incorrect and we have until 2050.... But when folks like Paul and James get worried I get worried.
@etienne8110
19 күн бұрын
@@HoserEh82 they are right to worry. We are going to see the conséquences of the accélération of emissions (especially methane) from the last two decades. Things are going to unfold very fast.
@TheDoomWizard
20 күн бұрын
Buckle Up
@robertm3561
19 күн бұрын
Really, better prepared.
@MichaelTBishop
20 күн бұрын
Anyone notice he has 68 tabs open? 😀
@etienne8110
19 күн бұрын
Almost nice.
@seank6717
19 күн бұрын
This is the way
@bunny_apocalypse
19 күн бұрын
literally me
@ThatGuyz82
17 күн бұрын
He is my people then.
@andreasstuermer4946
17 күн бұрын
These are emotional support tabs
@shawnlandry9287
19 күн бұрын
Denial is absolutely 💯 whats going on.. Even with the main climate activists. ❤too all .. hope we make it.
@toyotaprius79
19 күн бұрын
Hey from Ireland. I wouldn't say we have a summer, but it's not cold. The phrase "climate weirding" has come in one article by a farmer. Very hazy and heavy humid conditions but little rain in the east and more downpours in the west, temperatures were warm for summer but little sunshine to help clear the air. These conditions are perfect for mold in crops to develop and some farmers are seeing blight develop on crops that were devastated by an exceptionally wet and cold spring. While we're under a blanket of haze (and Wales, Scotland and west England) the most of Europe had been scorching and drowning.
@EditioCastigata
8 сағат бұрын
But, is this a one time event, or about to become the norm (or transition).
@richardh8082
19 күн бұрын
Some of us in the UK are very grateful we have so far escaped the fiery fate of the rest of europe these past 2 years. I fear for the future, so I am researching and preparing as best I can for whats to come
@CamelCasee
19 күн бұрын
I don't think we'll have a functioning state if the AMOC collapses, even in the short term our mild winter cold snaps every few years push older housing stock into problems keeping warm.
@bmac5085
19 күн бұрын
@CamelCasee yep. Heating and eating will be a huge concern for us in the UK Ireland.
@ronswanson76
19 күн бұрын
15-20° pole shift Happens every 12,000 years. Called the Younger Dryas. Lots of YT vids about it. 1000mph wind & water will wash over north and South America turning all organic matter into ribbons. Middle East surrounding Israel will be around. Something about a book called Revelation.
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
Ask your neighbors on that
@grantaum9677
18 күн бұрын
Those clouds that appear after heavy traffic in the sky might have something to do with it
@lharris4371
20 күн бұрын
And the Greenland shark says, "I've never seen anything like this."
@brawndo8726
20 күн бұрын
I really wonder how sea creatures navigate subsurface temperature anomalies. I suppose they drive deeper for refuge from the heat. Coastal species would then be at a disadvantage and warmer water species that suddenly find that can't find enough heat at the surface.
@rawfromnowhere
19 күн бұрын
@@brawndo8726 They go north. Up here in arctic Norway, they are catching a lot more species of fish than before.
@kilobravo737
19 күн бұрын
They can't see in the dark even if they didn't have parasites in their eyes and could actually see.
@samgay9571
19 күн бұрын
I live in the Gulf of Maine, and I've been a beach bum for more then 10 years. The changes have been extreamly obvious, especially in the last couple of years.
@konradcomrade4845
19 күн бұрын
I live in South Germany, North of the Alps mountains, and remember how, as a child in the 1960s, I did skiing in winter almost every afternoon. Now snow is sporadically. Last year, one time we had lots, but after 2 weeks almost all was gone, molten! On averege clearly less snow during winter season. It is not just the average temp, the wind pattern has changed, too. More North - South, less Westerlies. And that change is not from CO2; it is from those many wind-turbines extracting energy and power from the atmospheric winds circulation! The North Sea used to be famous for its severe storms, especially in winter; now it is a calm pool.
@davidjohnzenocollins
19 күн бұрын
@samgay9571 *extremely
@matthewatwood207
19 күн бұрын
Part of me misses Maine. My dad's family lives there. I'm sure it's not the same as when I left, 10 years ago.
@petewright4640
19 күн бұрын
Please describe these changes. Thanks
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
@@konradcomrade4845calm is bad?
@timothyrussell4445
19 күн бұрын
I live in the middle of Ireland and I can honestly say that temperatures this Summer have been considerably cooler, wetter and windier, and that this trend started a few years ago. It's about 5 years since we had a decent Summer, though winters have so far not been appreciably colder.
@juliebarks3195
20 күн бұрын
Great teacher Paul thanks. The UK 🥶😔. We are already heading for a winter of discontent.
@raoultesla2292
20 күн бұрын
My vasectomy is the only decision I made all 56yrs that has paid off. The AMOC is as hot as the Med? I guess good memories are all you get.
@Joe-ti7qd
18 күн бұрын
I agree. I'm childless at 44 and don't regret it. No kid should have to endure what I did.
@EnvironmentalCoffeehouse
20 күн бұрын
That's so funny Paul we did a show named just that three years ago! Love to your family and Shackleton!
@PaulHBeckwith
20 күн бұрын
Yes Sandy!!
@EnvironmentalCoffeehouse
20 күн бұрын
@@PaulHBeckwith We love you Paul...so many are so grateful for the information you provide and how we learn from you. 🌱
@GeorgeBrabant
19 күн бұрын
Thanks Paul! So many of us have learned So much from you. It is very appreciated by me
@destinyrae69
20 күн бұрын
I'm looking at the lack of hurricanes right now and scratching my head.
@ceeemm1901
20 күн бұрын
Try "Mr Weatherman"
@dnomyarnostaw
19 күн бұрын
@@ceeemm1901 We're only half way through the 2024 Season. So far "$8.915 billion (2024 USD)" in damage from the 2-3 major blows. This is already double the total of last (2023) season "US$4.19 billion'
@reuireuiop0
18 күн бұрын
Hurricane Beryl earliest cat 5 ever
@ronaldronald8819
19 күн бұрын
I think we stupid humans go on with "business" as usual until it starts to hurt and by then it is to late to do anything about it. Dear Paul the fact that your valuable and alarming observations have less then a million views underlines my previous statement.
@trstquint7114
16 күн бұрын
And at this moment, while we go on with "business" as usual, a lot of fellow planetary inhabitants are already feeling the full effects of climate change. Scorching heat in India, massive floods in Bangladesh, devastating forest fires in Southern Europe, North America and Australia.
@baneverything5580
16 күн бұрын
If you believe humans can control the natural dynamics of this planet and prevent ice ages and warm periods (see REAL historical temperature graph) you`ve been watching too many movies. The Sahara Desert was a lush forested region 5000 years ago. Our dependence on commercial agriculture is a huge mistake. So is allowing "scientists" and the media to lie for profit. The climate is heading into a sudden shift to cooling. What then? LOL!
@AusRyno
20 күн бұрын
Earth will be fine, shame about us though. We had a good run
@ceeemm1901
20 күн бұрын
Albeit a short one compared to all the other extinct species.
@brawndo8726
20 күн бұрын
There might be a select group of extremely wealthy lizard people that successfully maneuver change on their militarized mega yachts. Ironically the same people that caused the problem.
@DornigeChance
19 күн бұрын
No, a few had a good run on the costs of all the others.
@gehwissen3975
19 күн бұрын
Nuclear Power Plants will meltdown. No life then. By now - almost nobody talking about that. Deniers? Cowards. "The Rock will be fine"
@greenthumb8266
19 күн бұрын
@@brawndo8726if it helps you to think of them as some alien or mythical creatures, great I guess , whatever works. But the reality is they’re just greedy, self-serving, shortsighted human beings. And the rest of us are complacent, complaining and lack the courage to unite to take back our birthright, this planet, and demand that it be properly protected.
@BombusMonticola
20 күн бұрын
I have wondered myself whether our cold and or mild summer here in the UK is an obvious indicator the AMOC has already gone further south and or reduced flow
@richardwhite3522
19 күн бұрын
I wonder if the Beaufort Geyer has finally gone into reverse releasing all that fresh water switching off the AMOC.
@jonc67uk
19 күн бұрын
To be fair this is just like summers when I was a kid in the UK. The winter on the other hand was much too mild & caused a massive proliferation of plant pests & generally hasn't helped with crop yields. It's all a bit patchy, but overall we got away with it in the UK this year mostly. We could be headed for a Canadian climate...
@CamelCasee
19 күн бұрын
@@jonc67uk I don't remember it being this cloudy all the time.
@jonc67uk
19 күн бұрын
@@CamelCasee I remember a few cold cloudy wet summers but this was early 1980's. I have noticed a trend for earlier periods of decent weather in April, May & June over the last couple of decades though. The poor summer weather & warm winter weather has really coincided with the massive methane release from the pipeline sabotage...
@CamelCasee
19 күн бұрын
@@jonc67uk There are rumors of cloud seeding in the US leading to more cloud cover here too.
@WildAtlanticOceanPictures
18 күн бұрын
I‘m living on the WestCoast of Ireland. We had no summer at all in regards of temperature. Very cold (~5 Degree Celsius less as usual) and unusual windy. Just the spring was really warm. Not much rain from April to End of July. Since about 2 weeks it’s unusual windy for this time of the year.
@johnbaxter189
20 күн бұрын
Great report Paul.
@michaelschiessl8357
20 күн бұрын
Many thanks Paul great information and thank you for indirectly answering a question that I had several videos ago about what would happen to the US and Europe in a AMOC collapse..And just for another perspective on the AMOK and the Wavyness of the jet stream from some Indigenous ancestors who were told sometime ago that the (snakes of the sky) aka Jet streams would start to deviate from their normal patterns of circulation and would break off into parts and become unpredictable and cause extreme weird weather patterns worldwide..And they were told that it would be very noticeable during a certain time..and to look out for those weather patterns..Well too bad the human race is too busy to notice these changes except for Paul,and some climate scientists and subscribers to this channel..Just look at that crazy jet stream as an example!!
@rdallas81
20 күн бұрын
Thanks babe
@MalcolmYoung-h4k
20 күн бұрын
Paul. please please please. monetise your content. lightly if you wish, but you absolutely deserve it. You are our media scientist. Some can donate, but your main stream should be adverts. It is no dishonour to let adverts help pay for your way of life for us the viewers.
@demontrader1222
20 күн бұрын
Its a complete dishonour to publicise the ills of capitalism and profit from it. You aint gonna save yerself by dancing with the devil. You either find a way to reach without being compromised or find better things to do.
@DoseofTruth
18 күн бұрын
If he doesn't KZitem will anyway So, in my opinion, he ought to.
@susansparkle6812
18 күн бұрын
@@DoseofTruth you can contribute
@MalcolmYoung-h4k
17 күн бұрын
@@susansparkle6812 With respect. you have no idea who can contribute. Some of us are very poor. In actual fact, the more one follows this science, the less one should have their way of life converting nature to income.. take myself for example. Back in the day, I used to own entire walls of computers that I cobbled together to contribute to SETI@home and Genome at home. It would have been a very small step for me to then exploit such technology to mine bitcoins and make a ton of cash. But instead, directly because I listen to people like Paul Beckwith, such technology has been donated to those with less and I now ONLY operate a single laptop that can only draw 30watts from its plug. I quit the idea of any £ career and wound down my personal activities to only those required to maintain my existence and move towards deep adaptation.. Anyone ACTING on the words we are listening to, by very virtue of the acting should be rapidly becoming poorer by the standards of capitalism. I no longer extract from this earth and am working at full speed to liquidate what was accumilated and convert it into land to manage. So no, not all of us can contribute that money stuff to Paul, and those that can... well they are probably not taking it serious enough in the first place.. Paul can earn LOTS from monetizing with the amount of views he gets over time. WE should be focusing on converting ourselves to living within our ecological means.
@stephaniemcgillivray6383
17 күн бұрын
The way true researchers in their heart respond to gaining more money, is now I can fund more of my research. How even folks like Elon Musk used to look at it, and perhaps still does.
@AdastraRecordings
19 күн бұрын
Oh boy, here comes the tipping point. Has the Beaufort Gyre broke yet?
@arewethereyet9190
19 күн бұрын
you'll know! it's still accumulating.
@AdastraRecordings
19 күн бұрын
@@arewethereyet9190 ooof.
@babuvangu7220
19 күн бұрын
The AMOC has gone AWOL.
@punditgi
19 күн бұрын
Holy moly! Save the AMOC! 😮
@alanclark2584
6 күн бұрын
Really good presentation encouraging everyone to look at nullschool for themselves. I have been studying it and it also shows that close to the Portuguese coast and further south very cold anomaly close to the coast but not further north than Portugal. We know Portugal and Spain have been really hot this year so should certainly not show as much colder than normal. This is unless the AMOC is recurving south instead of north and removing the hot summer sea water from the coast replacing it with much colder, Atlantic cooled streams. This reinforces Paul's expert views. Appreciate any other views.
@sumiland6445
20 күн бұрын
I don't have all the information you do, but I say it's forever changed. Last winter was the first winter that there was no polar icecap. There were ice flows and icebergs, but no solid ice. That changes EVERYTHING
@user-pj5ub5cp9k
20 күн бұрын
No polar ice cap? That's ridiculous.
@Joe-ti7qd
18 күн бұрын
There is a polar ice cap.
@robertforsythe3280
20 күн бұрын
The Day will come that likely 90 percent of the planet will be uninhabitable. Many will have to go underground when need be. I wonder about Antarctica, could this be a haven for the human race? I wonder about islands in the stream. Could Cyclones/Hurricanes become a year round thing ? Deserts become wet, Farmers fields become deserts. The Sahara desert becomes a lush forest. Florida will a ever bearing place for upcoming waterfront property coming and going. Humanity as we know it will end. Thank you Professor for your work, and letting me spill a few things to come.
@ceeemm1901
20 күн бұрын
Don't worry about the islands in the stream. Dolly and Kenny will take care of them.
@brawndo8726
20 күн бұрын
Antarctica becoming a refuge would be no refuge at all. There's no soil there and all the land is under enough ice to flood most of the planet.
@robertforsythe3280
19 күн бұрын
@@ceeemm1901 There will be little movement thru the islands in the stream. The stream will flow right across the center of Florida. Both of our bodies will just dust in the wind. Don't worry as you will find out in the end.
@anarchycoww9019
19 күн бұрын
Humans have survived this time in history before. The earth is alive and may surprise you how quickly it can recover. Last collapse of the AMOC resulted in the ice age, the birth of the human Neolithic period, in which we did not only survive, but actually thrive!! Megaliths and artefacts exist to this day to prove it, we had trade, art, boats, religion, temples and villages, just like now… only more free.
@matthewatwood207
19 күн бұрын
I tried getting people to move to Antartica with me for years... maybe decades now. Nobody cares enough about the future to deal with any mild inconveniences in the present.
@YoYo-em4n
20 күн бұрын
Great explanation, Paul. I didn't really understand it until now. But this was comprehensive and made all the pieces "click" together. Cheers.
@PaulHBeckwith
19 күн бұрын
You're very welcome!
@mickdaly2778
19 күн бұрын
Thanks Paul. I did not watch your videos in a year (CC fatigue) I'm living in a small holding in west of Éire. This summer is gone awol !!!
@bringhomethebasil8729
20 күн бұрын
Time to build a mega ocean fan to artificially push the warm water up …. I wonder whatever happened to the fake snow around Greenland ?
@edtremblay6694
20 күн бұрын
What has gone amok with the climate catastrophe.
@hooplawithbilliesue8143
20 күн бұрын
Thanks Paul
@stephandhaene35
Күн бұрын
I live in Belgium, and we had a very short summer (basically 3 weeks, not more). Today our temps at 5PM was a chilling 9˚C. NOT normal for the time of year.
@odeszarules5125
19 күн бұрын
Gaia has every right to fight back. Look what we (corporations) did to her beautiful waters.
@greg1474
18 күн бұрын
Worship the Creator instead of paganism. There is no Gaia, only God.
@docked9953
18 күн бұрын
You know nothing and provoking is not evoking
@susansparkle6812
18 күн бұрын
We are not corporations. Corporations were created by royals, and those sickos still run them.
@velisvideos6208
19 күн бұрын
Surely the best way to see what is happening to AMOC is by direct measurements of these ocean currents. Is anyone even planning to do that?
@gehwissen3975
19 күн бұрын
They do it - as far as possible. AMOC ist not ein 'stream' - more like a pulse. And very slow. There is not much data from the past - and so a huge noise. I don't think the predictions as reliable. It will happen - why are we so obsessed with the exact point in time?
@johnglad5
20 күн бұрын
God bless
@JoeCoxJodo
17 күн бұрын
One of the most striking things to me is the eerie lack of commenting in the comments section drawing any attention to the notable and occuring breakdown in political and more general psychological stability which these conditions seem to be provoking
@GraemeWight-wx3xz
19 күн бұрын
British temperatures are dependant on the gulf stream which usually brings warmer water to displace arctic flows but it seems the northward passage of the yrs warmer water has been blocked. There is an atmospheric correlation too.
@sarahb.6475
18 күн бұрын
Has anyone noticed on the one map that Lake Superior was the yellow color to show it was hot???
@mattoliver4976
19 күн бұрын
Yep, uk summer has been nonexistent this year, feels very strange.
@alexandrabryden6143
19 күн бұрын
Thankyou Paul. I live on the west coast of Scotland and learned a bit more about the Amoc tonight. I'll read the wiki page. It's pretty concerning.
@daveb7049
18 күн бұрын
In Australia we are hitting temperatures at the end of winter that were normally not seen for at least 2 months into spring.
@susansparkle6812
18 күн бұрын
Expect the hottest summer ever. Expect the highest heat death count ever.
@Wintercorpse
3 күн бұрын
I think everyone should see this and it looks like it's affecting things!
@seanmullan8527
19 күн бұрын
Hi Paul! I live in St. John's, Newfoundland. What do you think will happen there? Will the cool Labrador Current intensify and bring more sea ice and delayed summer weather... Or will the warm Gulf Stream pool up around Newfoundland as it can't get further north, thereby warming Newfoundland substantially. What's going on? 😢
@FelixTheAnimator
19 күн бұрын
A piling gulf stream and raising sea level and temperature is predicted for the eastern seaboard of north america.
@brawndo8726
20 күн бұрын
What would explain the Arctic sea surface heat anomaly if the northern loops are being suppressed?
@johngaudet6316
19 күн бұрын
The cold ocean around it isn't being moved north because of AMOC collapse.
@bunny_apocalypse
19 күн бұрын
You should all look into amaranth if you live in Europe. Its a very drought tolerant crop, leaves and seeds are edible, grows in zones 2-10. Leaves can be prepared into a spinach alternative, used in salads and stews. Seeds can be used as a grain or rice alternative. I got more edible stuff than I can use.
@Corrie-fd9ww
19 күн бұрын
Thank you Paul! This is invaluable. Love how clear you’ve made this.
@brianmahoney2079
19 күн бұрын
We had some humid days in July but I was thinking it was a weird august in Cleveland, last year on July 5 2023 Cleveland logged the hottest day on record. Its a regional thing, the floods and storms and droughts will shift? Right? I am learning its very complicated. Weird I just found out about the AMOK lastmonth and the friggen thing shuts down. Just my luck.
@TennesseeJed
20 күн бұрын
💧
@tg4941
19 күн бұрын
Did I read this right from the chart at Antarctica that there is temps up to 14° degrees C.? It's their winter down there. That seems serious. We in UK in the East have had some good warmth over last four weeks or so. Up north it's been cooler and wetter. We are now back in Atlantic pattern so it's raining and cool today. Met office says we are getting warm hot weather next week. I hope it's due to La Nina. If ocean currents are changing it is troubling.
@CamelCasee
19 күн бұрын
It's felt cool and cloudy in the west this year, I think there's been a bit of a split. I think the cloudiness is why it's felt so much cooler in places too.
@susansparkle6812
18 күн бұрын
I live in the North, hottest summer ever.
@debbied9740
20 күн бұрын
I went to sites can't tell I'm not scientist. I just wish someone could tell a person in PNW, what to prepare for? What kind of weather for one would be nice to know? I can prepare. I do take this seriously. I'm very concerned that we are not told what to prepare for?
@NickBrowning-lk1oj
20 күн бұрын
We will fare better than many places in PNW. I'm south Vancouver Island...it's still gonna be catastrophic from I can discern...but Pacific is so huge it will mediate us and Japan and New Zealand as temperate zones better than any other places on earth
@antonyjh1234
20 күн бұрын
It depends on your age as to what you would need to do, also who you want to prepare for. Most people's Pauls age would have lived through less than 2mm per year sea level rise, a video the other day showed 8.1, a rise per year in 2022, not due until 2050. It won't be weather that you might have to prepare for, it might be global flooding and then public awareness of how much everything we have known is changing for something much worse. 2mm a year to 10 or 1cm per year means the increase the last 30 years will be equal to the next ten, once that gets to be part of the news cycle, and that ""its quicker than what we 'were told"" and grandchildren today might see ten times the flooding Paul might, it will be how does anybody prepare.
@etienne8110
19 күн бұрын
You can t prepare. It will be chaos. Températures and rainfalls will fluctuate wildly between every years, with no way to predict anything. The patterns are being destroyed, it will takes decades (if not centuries) before the system finds a new equilibrium with new patterns. Meanwhile it will be the chaotic période of permanent changes...
@gehwissen3975
19 күн бұрын
"Who maintains the nuclear power plants?" Until this question is answered in a positive way - I will not think about 'preparation and solution'
@michaeloreilly657
19 күн бұрын
No man is an island.
@kimweaver1252
20 күн бұрын
NOT "amuck"..... amok. "Amok, or running amok, is derived from the Malay word mengamok, which means to make a furious and desperate charge. Captain Cook is credited with making the first outside observations and recordings of amok in the Malay tribesmen in 1770 during his around-the-world voyage."
@rdallas81
20 күн бұрын
Get the mock outta heah!
@rickmalaschenko3046
20 күн бұрын
What about mock fish 🐟?
@markhasleton5533
20 күн бұрын
You're a pompous FOOL You don't appear capable of understanding the passive verb 'derived' . As a 'derived ' word , it does NOT have to have the pronunciation used in the original Malay. Because it's NO LONGER a strictly MALAY WORD.
@CAM-fq8lv
20 күн бұрын
Paul is using the archaic spelling. Still acceptable in US and Canada.
@antonyjh1234
20 күн бұрын
Online it has it has Amuck as the older spelling.
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
16 күн бұрын
That ocean heat view of the planet shows that the North Atlantic Current already seems to be turning south at Portugal. I hate to see what winter will be like in Europe this year. 🥶🥶🥶😨😰
@enviromad
19 күн бұрын
we are having summer weather in southern Australia unlike anything in the past
@kilobravo737
19 күн бұрын
How are your forests doing?
@anarchycoww9019
19 күн бұрын
@@kilobravo737our last government allowed them to burn in 2019, and cleared what was left (at a worse rate than the Amazon) Our biggest problem now is flooding, since we’ve lost all the vegetation that would have maintained and protected our land. But the earth is alive and she will recover amazing fast. Most of what was lost in the fires of 2019 is now covered (if not in floods) in rich bright green regrowth. Australia is an amazing example of how quickly nature can restore itself from disaster.
@enviromad
19 күн бұрын
@@kilobravo737 where i live is a stringy bark forest on sand and growing nicely but due for a fire unfortunately, its last bush fire was around 1950, i have also noticed crickets have been chirping for weeks now and that is very unusual for winter
@susansparkle6812
18 күн бұрын
Expect next summer to be the hottest ever!
@enviromad
18 күн бұрын
@@susansparkle6812 yes i agree, im thinking of camping on the south coast beach to keep cool
@Felix-rw2et
7 күн бұрын
If the AMOC collapses the temperatures in Europe will collapse between 4 to 10 degrees Celsius and there will be very little rain. This will produce a catastrophic famine and desertification of the continent!
@Rene-uz3eb
20 күн бұрын
I don't quite understand the causal correlation of higher eastern seaboard rise and slower amoc. For all I know it could just be all the housing on the sea board making the land sink. It seems to me the more relevant quantity is the sea temp rise has been twice along the eastern seaboard ie amoc has been getting hotter up there, so more heat is transported, but there is probably not much more heat it can take given arctic ice is unfrozen in summer so the extra water surface gets you all the cooling you're going to get, while air temps keep going up much faster in the arctic thanks to co2 lock in of heat. I would guess at this point it's more that the amoc has reached its heat transport capacity, which may actually have increased. But from now on we'd see the effect of additional heat accumulating in the south which can't be loaded on the amoc, and at the same time the full brunt of disproportional atmospheric warming of the arctic reducing the capacity of the amoc.
@user-vl7vk3ne6y
15 күн бұрын
I just swam in the ocean near providence RI and never in all my 50 years has if felt so warm. Like a Caribbean sea or bathtub almost 80 degrees! No life no jellyfish very few seabirds and shells compared to childhood(80).
@yorkiebuck
19 күн бұрын
Sorry Paul, have to take issue with you here. The summer in the UK has been near the average - wet in the NW but drier in the SE. Temps overall slightly cooler than average after a very cool start the coolest for 30-50 years . This may change a bit after some heavy rain forecast for the SE this weekend and a warm week anticipated next week. For those in the UK who dont believe me please visit the Met Office's weekly deep dive on Tuesday's Deep Dive on 20/08/24. What has been good is that after a diabolically wet winter when farmers could only plant their winter wheat in April! is that strolling in the Yorkshire countryside the crops look really good. And that is the most important thing is it not? No plums though but pleasingly no wasps!
@Randy778
19 күн бұрын
Well since the increasing energy imbalance shifts the whole system an "average of old" is a "new bottom" likelyhood scenario? Assume the predictions grouping in probability channels for a given time in the year. You cannot predict the exact number but reasonably assume it´s going to be in XYZ ballpark with 80% probability. Now our geoengineering experiment shifts those probability channels thus we´re going to have a "new normal" with this old normal being at a lesser likely position in our probability channel. So eventhough the UK had a "normal" summer this isn´t a sign of "everything ok"? I hope we´re agreeing here?
@CamelCasee
19 күн бұрын
Lack of sun in parts makes it feel cooler, but it was a cool start indeed took ages to get to shorts and tshirt weather.
@pabs7373
18 күн бұрын
I have loads of plums in my orchard in Kent and a wasps nest in the roof
@MellaOBrolchain
14 күн бұрын
I think we may draw a correlation between no plums and no wasps.
@yorkiebuck
14 күн бұрын
@@MellaOBrolchain Drawing statistical correlations can sometimes be a dangerous thing to do.
@eriklaken1025
19 күн бұрын
Thank you Paul, this i can understand.
@ESPattenden
16 күн бұрын
This was very helpful. Thank you for the information.
@obsoleteoptics
19 күн бұрын
It's amok, not amuck
@Joe-ti7qd
18 күн бұрын
Regardless, I prefer amuck.
@ThatGuyz82
17 күн бұрын
Amuck amuck amuck amuck amuck...
@man_at_the_end_of_time
18 күн бұрын
A cold winter in Europe would be useful for rural tank travel.
@treefrog3349
19 күн бұрын
The fault of Paul Beckwith's analysis is that he assumes that his potential listeners have a similar level of his scientific experience and acumen. He would reach a larger and more recipient audience if he could explain the situation in laymen's terms. He speaks to a small portion of an audience who is ALREADY cognizant of the facts. Teach, Mr. Beckwith. Don't preach. Please!
@TrevreWxAZ
19 күн бұрын
Just read more
@reuireuiop0
18 күн бұрын
@@TrevreWxAZ Read ? You must be a survivor of the early 20th century !
@susan-n1d6p
20 күн бұрын
Does anyone else notice that the cold blob that has been just south of Greenland is no longer there???
@brawndo8726
20 күн бұрын
Yes, I noticed that. Presumably that's become a new primary subduction zone due to lack of heat and salinity.
@anarchycoww9019
19 күн бұрын
But isn’t it summer in the northern hemisphere currently?
@byrnemeister2008
19 күн бұрын
@@anarchycoww9019supposed to be. Really hot in some places. South of the jet stream. Cold and wet to the north of the jet stream. So no summer for the UK.
@tornadoclips2022
20 күн бұрын
Significant warming occurring recently… Just glad that when it collapses earths temp will drop significantly
@thorulf1337
20 күн бұрын
Why on earth would the temp drop? It is simply the heat distribution that will be destroyed. Colder in some places and hotter in others. This is of course bad news since the balance we are used to will be gone. However, The earth average will stay the same, and slowly keep increasing.
@IveJustHadAPiss
20 күн бұрын
I think you've misunderstood things a little. Global temperatures will still rise.
@kubexiu
19 күн бұрын
@@thorulf1337 We are adding extra energy trough fossil fuels. Extra energy. I don't think greenhouse effect is a main problem. What comes from sun has to go out sooner or later. Just go to any city or an industrial site. Every machine in a world is producing extra heat. My point is that heat has to go somewhere . There is no glass copule around an earth. Planet is radiating also. I believe. Ok its getting warmer but the balance is still here. If we remove all Co2 right now what do You thing will happen?
@matthewatwood207
19 күн бұрын
@@thorulf1337there's a common thought that the heat will lead to a sudden drop, when the sky fills with clouds that evaporated due to the heat, blocking the light like a nuclear winter.
@jagigante1
18 күн бұрын
Very good video thank you for sharing!
@DecadeAgoGaming
19 күн бұрын
The cold spot off the US east coast is from hurricane Ernesto
@michaeloreilly657
19 күн бұрын
It'll be gone in a week, and normal service will resume.
@petra...
19 күн бұрын
Here in Holland we had (and have) a late summer. Still, this looks very scary. As do the predictions of sea level rise. We are hardly above sea level now... Nobody seems to worry though. Why??
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
GSL should be slow this century
@LeonMaas-t6m
16 күн бұрын
Paul, please, please criticize the following: What if the volume of melting ice in the North has been reduced to a level that it’s cooling power over the AMOC has gone!!! So the warmer temperatures there are no a consequence but the root cause of slowing AMOC. The ice in Antarctica is stiil with these cooling power from above surface ice
@sebastiangaecki3348
9 күн бұрын
last two years in my country in central Europe we have this anomaly of very warm September, basically over 30 degrees temperatures right now, it is like Summer is longer than it should be, 10 - 15 years ago it would be expected for temperatures to drop down in middle of August and no heat wave after that. Also last two years probably due to El Nino we had quite mild spring season, before that during La nina spring were getting more and more hot throughout last 10 years on average. Anomaly is one thing but trend is visible even just by living in a single place for years.
@martymethuselah
20 күн бұрын
Amuk..Amuk..Amuk.. star trek fight music..
@xlr555usa
16 күн бұрын
Everything has gone AMOC, what the hay Jay?
@stephaniemcgillivray6383
17 күн бұрын
During a major transition of any kind, the system enters chaos. Which means extremes in both directions get more extreme. Hot hotter, cold colder. But there are other influences also, like La Nina/El Nino, solar cycles (we're at a peak and solar storms strengthen storms -- meaning rain and lightning where dry = fires) also have effects which may increase or offset chaotic swings. As chaos continues, more fluctuations becoming less predictable occur. Eventually, there will be 3 different swings. Then some new order will emerge, different from what was before, and that will remain stable (climate-wise, weather still varies). We don't know what that new order will be. It's likely to do with the imbalance between Arctic Sea ice disappearing while there is still Antarctic ice. Less land, other than Antarctica, in the Southern Hemisphere probably also will play a role as oceans change temperature more slowly than land masses.
@stephaniemcgillivray6383
17 күн бұрын
It could be the current AMOC and related currents will not slow and stop, but rather shift position and direction. I'm no expert, just thinking logically. Imagine the AMOC and associated major ocean circulation currents stopped. With no circulation between latitudes, the northern hemisphere may heat more (because of more land), especially on the shallower Atlantic side. And the southern hemisphere would initially become colder. The contrast might create giant, strong storms. But if warming continues, eventually the southern hemisphere will warm too, just more slowly than the northern hemisphere. Then, storms may slow to such a degree that desertification spreads, especially in the hotter northern hemisphere, and especially in large land masses, as storms usually come from oceans. It doesn't seem likely there would be no ocean circulation between latitudes (vertically on the globe), or none at all. So it is more likely the major ocean circulation currents will adapt to the changes and shift. I hope someone is modelling how that might happen. Though there are so many unknowns that the answer might be they could change in any way. What is most likely is that the major ocean circulation currents will slow where they are now, but new ones will start to form and grow in strength. They may shift around until a new stable (overwhelming) direction of forces strengthen based on our new climate patterns (also because warming factors driving the system do not all originate uniformly). But eventually they are likely to settle into a new form based on warmer oceans, perhaps no more ice caps, and the slowly changing configuration of oceans and continents.
@dougmartinek9964
17 күн бұрын
Not quite sure why they put that United Nations garbage up there. Everyone in the world knows they are the least reliable for accurate information😂😂
@spanglishfantastico
7 күн бұрын
Is there somewhere to see how fast the North Atlantic Drift moves at any given time? Is that measured?
@johnarthur6180
17 күн бұрын
what the sun is doing is of concern. Even the sunflowers wont face the sun any more. Many say the sun is white and not yellow anymore and the magnetic field is extremely weak now. God help us if we get a seriously big x flare.
@MHow1900
17 күн бұрын
Is the earths magnetic field included in these models? Without accounting for the magnetic changes, the models would be missing a major component. The polar drift has been huge over the last 10 years.
@JPVanTyler
18 күн бұрын
I have noticed the weather in Eastern Washington has brought cooler temperatures, as if fall has arrived. This abnormal here. I am thinking the changes to our planet and our solar system are exponentially increasing their speed.
@TipsOK-bw1jz
16 күн бұрын
Usually we have high temperature in Bangladesh during this time. But now it is different. It is not as warm as it used to and raining a lot! Something is not right
@IdrisFashan
17 күн бұрын
I’m confused. Are you using surface water readings to determine AMOC? That’s only covering a portion of the flow, no? The issue isn’t the warm surface water, it’s the movement of the deep sea cool water. Surface temps won’t reveal that, will they? I’m no climatologist, tho.
@sonnyeastham
19 күн бұрын
...lol...cartoon character 😮
@petewright4640
19 күн бұрын
Another tell tale sign that something drastic may have happened to the AMOC are some record breaking high tides along the UK south coast this spring. They were driven by strong SW winds but broke longstanding records. One effect of an amoc slowdown would be a rise in av sea level around the UK. I think that around May 2023 the amoc had a big, and continuing, hesitation. What we are seeing, including the abrupt and unexplained rise in global av temps this last year, is consistent with this. It may be a hesitation but perhaps it's a complete collapse. The effects will take decades to play out as the North Atlantic cools and other effects propagate around the system. The latest modeling of the effect in Europe of a shutdown are far more serious than those currently described in Wikipedia.
@caustinolino3687
18 күн бұрын
Ok so what does this mean for individual people? If I dont own beachfront property to care about sea levels, and Id like where i live to be warmer, and it is getting warmer, so what exactly am I supposed to be worried about? Why should the climate from 2015 or whatever be locked forever?
@reuireuiop0
18 күн бұрын
Increasing food prices. Already see coffee & cocoa going up, as these prefer specific cooler climate characteristics in tropical zones. You're also gonna see increasing crop insecurities due to changing rain & temp patterns, food crops often have their range of preferences, farmers don't yet know about how to grow new crops that do well with new temps and lesser humidity - unless they grow in lowlands close to Sea, which suffer from intrusion of salty waters. Some crucial rice growing areas like Mekong Delta, are at risk here. Beach Front property is not a concern on foreseeable term, unless you want to invest in coastal harbor development with a plus 30 years finance horizon. Think most investors still dodge that question, but if AMOC _does_ start to falter, sea rise along Atlantic coast may come up quicker than these planning horizons allow for - one foot higher plus a stronger storm surge might wash away billions worth of investment in one night. There's a certain unpredictability here - as long things seem stable, no one is going to withdraw from such projects - until one project takes _that_ hit But that's unlikely to happen within 20 years, even if those so called doomsday glaciers in West Antarctica start moving - only showing some signs so far, but nothing definitive. Food prices, that's what most folks in the West are going to feel, plus some extra heatwave and the odd unexpected winter freezes + snow dumps, a weakening jet stream gonna do that for us. Maybe serious water shortage if you happen to be in the wrong region, South Africa already seen that, some dry corners of America can't be sure, in particular where aquifers already have dropped. Would not surprise me if the Army will have to truck in water in some badly drought stricken area next decade.
@IhanaHana
20 күн бұрын
Amok.
@Joe-ti7qd
18 күн бұрын
Not in Canada
@slickman6475
20 күн бұрын
Umm i have a qestion i live in greece if the amoc colapsed how much would that reduce tempruture and the patterns say that the amoc will weaken only by 30-40 precent by 2100 so what makes people think that it will colapse as early as 2050 or 2037
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
You shouldn't be much affected You will dry over time though
@slickman6475
18 күн бұрын
@@DrSmooth2000no but like acording to the maps its gonna cool the area by like3-5 celcius but idk
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
@@slickman6475 others more expert ofc but I'd suspect Greece is too far from Atlantic In your case, look up the ' Hadley Cells migration ' Dry mass over Sahara moves upwards... jungle fills in behind it so good for them not so food for you. Great tourism if always hot and dry. Keep Danish bier on tap. Will be more holidays If north and west EU are in a freeze!¡!
@RumoredAtmos
18 күн бұрын
Remember the movie "The Day After Tomorrow". Also weird coincidence that this aligns with the upcoming geomagnetic excursion, and the "World One" project.
@fifinutter8513
19 күн бұрын
My part of North America is in a severe drought, so your generalization about rainfall is a bit of an overstatement.
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
West?
@albedo4264
16 күн бұрын
Any day now. This collapse of something. Any day...
@johnandjenbach
19 күн бұрын
This was predicted in Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth “ over twenty years ago. He called it the Atlantic conveyor current.
@gehwissen3975
19 күн бұрын
I think it's a sick obsession. "When *exactly* we go extinct? I ask for my children"
@anarchycoww9019
19 күн бұрын
You may go extinct … if you don’t plan for a future you are warned about. Of course everyone won’t survive but humans have survived this before and made it to this day. You could take this knowledge and prepare to live in a world free of debt, of a 9-5, a true freedom where your children can live in harmony with the land. Or don’t. Everyone is free to believe what they want
@DoseofTruth
18 күн бұрын
Trying to get out of field trips, eh?
@user-wh2sj5mb8i
20 күн бұрын
stratification, salinity, freshwater, leads to this?
@DrSmooth2000
18 күн бұрын
Linked by time but not way I'd describe it
@flyingtoaster1427
18 күн бұрын
would the amount of spring chlorophyll coming to surface be an indicator?
@konradcomrade4845
19 күн бұрын
10:10 The blue Lines in the Thermohaline map show the circulation of 4°C cold water, which is down at the bottom of the oceans. I was surprised to find out how much that is: all Water below -1800m is 4°C , 39.2°F, assuming an average depth of Earth's oceans -4000m, I come to the conclusion that 1/2 of the water is this cold. Probably the amount of cold earth's ocean bottom water increased during the ice age epoch! The Dino-Sauriers hadn't that cold conditions in the ocean bottom (but knew not much about their situation)!
@williamrbuchanan4153
18 күн бұрын
Sunbather has to roll over to get more exposure in required places . Logic tells the truth.colours and temp, not required, but we made it happen , we can reverse weight difference to regain our attitude to Solar exposure. We know what’s happened, what can we do to repair it. Read on.
Пікірлер: 456