Is climate change bringing the Arctic to Europe?
The bitterly cold weather sweeping Britain and the rest of Europe has
been linked by scientists with the ice-free seas of the Arctic, where
global warming is exerting its greatest influence.
A dramatic loss of sea ice covering the Barents and Kara Seas above
northern Russia could explain why a chill Arctic wind has engulfed much
of Europe and killed 221 people over the past week.
The death toll from Arctic blast has been particularly severe in the
Ukraine, where many of the dead have been people sleeping on the
streets. Heating and food tents have been set up to ease their hardship.
In Romania 24 people are known to have died and 17 in Poland.
A growing number of experts believe complex wind patterns are being
changed because melting Arctic sea ice has exposed huge swaths of
normally frozen ocean to the atmosphere above.
In particular, the loss of Arctic sea ice could be influencing the
development of high-pressure weather systems over northern Russia, which
bring very cold winds from the Arctic and Siberia to Western Europe and
the British Isles, the scientists believe. An intense anticyclone over
north-west Russia is behind the bitterly cold easterly winds that have
swept across Europe and some climate scientists say the lack of Arctic
sea ice brought about by global warming is responsible.
"The current weather pattern fits earlier predictions of computer
models for how the atmosphere responds to the loss of sea ice due to
global warming," said Professor Stefan Rahmstorf of the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Research. "The ice-free areas of the ocean
act like a heater as the water is warmer than the Arctic air above it.
This favours the formation of a high-pressure system near the Barents
Sea, which steers cold air into Europe."
Sea ice covering the Barents and Kara Seas has been exceptionally low
this winter, according to the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre in
Boulder, Colorado. But air temperatures above the Barents and Kara Seas
have been higher than average. The relatively mild westerly winds that
have kept Britain from freezing much of this winter have been blocked by
fierce high pressure over north-west Russia, centred on an area just
south of the Barents Sea.
Studies by scientists at the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and
Marine Research have confirmed a link between the loss of Arctic sea ice
and the development of high-pressure zones in the polar region, which
influence wind patterns at lower latitudes further south. Scientists
found that as the cap of sea ice is removed from the ocean, huge amounts
of heat are released from the sea into the colder air above, causing the
air to rise. Rising air destabilises the atmosphere and alters the
difference in air pressure between the Arctic and more southerly
regions, changing wind patterns.
Professor Rahmstorf said the Alfred Wegener study confirms earlier
predictions from computer models by Vladimir Petoukhov of the Potsdam
Institute, who forecast colder winters in western Europe as a result of
melting sea ice.
Dr Petoukhov and his colleague Vladimir Semenov were among the first
scientists to suggest a link between the loss of sea ice and colder
winters in Europe. Their 2009 study simulated the effects of
disappearing sea ice and found that for some years to come the loss will
increase the chances of colder winters.
"Whoever thinks that the shrinking of some far-away sea ice won't
bother him could be wrong. There are complex interconnections in the
climate system, and in the Barents-Kara Sea we might have discovered a
powerful feedback mechanism," Dr Petoukhov said.
But UK climate researcher Adam Scaife said other complexities are
almost certainly influencing the current cold spell.
"There is a pretty clear link between the current event and the upper
level winds... The winds up at 30km (18.6 miles) altitude are very
weak," he said. "We have verified several times using computer model
experiments that this leads to high pressure across northern Europe and
cold winter conditions in the UK as we see now."
- The Independent
|