Climate Feedback

Sinking sink

Posted by Olive Heffernan on behalf of Michael Hopkin

It looks as if the Southern Ocean – the great white hope for sucking up mankind’s carbon emissions – is slowly losing its efficiency as a carbon sink due to largely unforseen climate feedbacks. It’s early days, but this first real-world measurement of a slowdown in the ocean’s ability to dissolve carbon could have worrying implications for those currently thinking about how to stabilize atmospheric greenhouse levels.

Read more on the Southern Ocean’s reduced CO2 uptake here

Michael Hopkin

News reporter, Nature

Comments

  1. Kerry McEvilly said:

    This, as will become obvious, is not a strong suit of mine, but my understanding is that surface salinity and upwelling of Atlantic waters were the main drivers of the ACC.

    What feedbacks are now affecting the ACC?

    Unfortunately the link leads to the subscription site and the copy here at work has yet to cross my desk.

    Report this comment Cancel report
    Your details

    Please confirm the words below

    In order to reduce spamming, this process ensures you are a real person and not an automated program.

Comments are closed.