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Climate scientists caution Nordic ministers of altering Atlantic Ocean present

More than 40 environment scientists are advising Nordic ministers to prevent worldwide warming from triggering a major modification in an Atlantic Ocean present, which could set off abrupt shifts in weather patterns and damage environments.

A collapse of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Blood circulation, a system of ocean currents that carries warm water into the North Atlantic and offers Europe its mild environment, could put living conditions for people in the Arctic region and beyond at danger, according to the researchers.

Such an ocean flow modification would have terrible and irreversible impacts especially for Nordic nations, but also for other parts of the world, the scientists stated in a letter on Saturday to the Nordic Council of Ministers, which makes up 5 nations, including Denmark and Sweden, and three self-governing territories.

The letter urges the council to actions that might involve requiring worldwide greenhouse-gas emission cuts.

Several studies have recommended that the threat of the Atlantic existing changing has actually been significantly ignored, the scientists said, including that there was a severe possibility of passing the tipping point in the next couple of decades.

If Britain and Ireland end up being like northern Norway, (that). has incredible effects. Our finding is that this is not a. low likelihood, stated professor Peter Ditlevsen at the. University of Copenhagen, a signatory of the letter.

This is not something you easily adapt to.

A collapse of the ocean-current system would increase. cooling of the Northern Hemisphere, raise Atlantic sea levels,. drop precipitation over Europe and North America and shift. monsoons in South America and Africa, according to the United. Kingdom's Met Office.

Global subsidies for nonrenewable fuel sources reached a record $7. trillion in 2022, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Such aids reveal there is no reputable effort to avoid. such a climate catastrophe, stated teacher Stefan Rahmstorf from. Germany's Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.

(source: Reuters)