Enhanced northward ocean transport of anthropogenic carbon through recovery of overturning circulation may be affecting North Atlantic CO2 uptake efficiency
- 1National Oceanography Centre, OBG, Southampton, United Kingdom of Great Britain – England, Scotland, Wales (peter.brown@noc.ac.uk)
- 2NORCE, Bergen, Norway
- 3University of Hamburg, Germany
- 4IFREMER, France
- 5University of Exeter, UK
- 6University of Miami, USA
- 7NOAA AOML, Miami, USA
Of the additional carbon dioxide added to the atmosphere by human activities the ocean absorbs approximately a quarter, with a disproportionate fraction accumulating at depth in the North Atlantic due to the combined action of northward ocean transport (through the meridional overturning circulation) and strong air-sea fluxes. Combining repeat hydrography with circulation estimates from the RAPID mooring array at 26N it was found that between 2004 and 2012 these two processes were roughly equal in magnitude, but decreasing ocean transports were tipping the balance more towards air-sea uptake over time as the AMOC weakened. New observations from 2012 to 2022 show that this process has now reversed - a recovering AMOC combined with increasing loadings of carbon is now transporting substantially greater quantities of anthropogenic carbon northwards into the North Atlantic. Changes in regional air-sea fluxes suggests that the increased northward ocean carbon transport may be affecting CO2 uptake capacity downstream.
How to cite: Brown, P., McDonagh, E., Sanders, R., Moat, B., Frajka-Williams, E., King, B., Carracedo, L., Watson, A., Schuster, U., Flohr, A., Johns, W., and Baringer, M.: Enhanced northward ocean transport of anthropogenic carbon through recovery of overturning circulation may be affecting North Atlantic CO2 uptake efficiency, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-15696, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-15696, 2024.