I’ve only been to the beach once this year, despite my best efforts to the contrary. The North Atlantic can be still brisk even in early July. As I approached the water, I braced myself for a potential sting that never came. It turned out the water was almost 4 degrees warmer than it had been on the same day the year before.
That tracks when you realize that July was the hottest month ever in recorded history, and we’re likewise seeing oceanic temperatures hit worrying highs around the world. Off the coast of Florida, the water has hit 100ºF multiple times in last week, a temperature more suitable to hot tubs than the open sea. The unavoidable truth is that our oceans are warming faster than predicted, and it is beginning to feel like the hackneyed “frog in a slowly boiling pot” analogy for climate change is more apt than ever.
Fittingly, last week also marked the release of a study that warned that the warming Atlantic waters could portend a major meteorological shift in our lifetimes. The danger is centered on the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a system of currents that pulls warm water from the Caribbean tropics toward the North Atlantic. When that water releases its heat and cools, it sinks to the ocean floor where it’s drawn back south again. (That’s a different system than the Gulf Stream or the North Atlantic Current, which help control the climate of the southern U.S. and northwestern Europe.)
The AMOC has long been considered one of the most delicate potential “tipping elements” on Earth, where we could see sudden shifts or collapses in typical behavior. Its collapse would be a shift “as abrupt and irreversible as turning off a light switch, and it could lead to dramatic changes in weather on either side of the Atlantic,” as The Washington Post framed it. Previous analysis from the United Nations has estimated with “medium confidence” that we won’t see that happen this century. But a more recent paper, published in the journal Nature Communications on Tuesday, estimates the collapse to occur on average in the 2050s.
Things seem even more dire when you look at the other side of the Atlantic. The Mediterranean Sea, already in the midst of its hottest July ever, last Monday broke the record for the hottest the sea has ever been, hitting 83.6º F. As Scottish meteorologist Scott Duncan noted, usually the maximum temperature in the area is in August, so the record could still be broken again.








