The water in our world's oceans is always moving – pulled by tides, blown by waves, and slowly circulating around the globe by the force of the Great Ocean Conveyor Belt (aka thermohaline circulation). The Conveyor is powered by differences is water temperature and salinity, and one of its most well know parts, the Gulf Stream, is what gives Europe it's relatively mild climate.
How it works
Warm salty water from the Gulf Stream is cooled when it reaches the
North Atlantic. It becomes denser and sinks to deeper layers of the
ocean, ‘pumping’ cold water south in the deep ocean, past Africa into
the South Atlantic. Salt rejected as sea ice forms also increases the
density of these waters and contributes to the process.
The dense, cooled water becomes part of what is called the Ocean
Conveyor, and the water eventually returns to the surface in the Indian
and Pacific Oceans. As warm water returns to the Atlantic, the current
moves pole-wards as the Atlantic Gulf Stream and North Atlantic Drift,
warming northwestern Europe substantially.
Aside from keeping Europe warm, and playing an important role in the
global climate, the Conveyor provides an up welling of bottom ocean
nutrients, and increases the oceanic absorption of carbon
dioxide. The Gulf Stream is what moderates European climate, the
whole system is called The Great Conveyor Belt, the Great Ocean
Conveyor, or whatever other popular name you want to give to the
thermohaline circulation system.
What could go badly wrong
Worryingly, recent studies warn that we may already have evidence of a
slower Conveyor circulation over the Scotland-Greenland deep ocean
ridge. And while the Conveyor appears to have operated
fairly reliably over the past several thousand years, an examination of
ice cores from both Greenland and Antarctica shows that this has not
always been the case. In the more distant past, changes to the
Conveyor circulation are associated with abrupt climate change.
In short, dilution of the ocean's salinity - from meting Arctic ice
(such as the Greenland ice sheet) and/or increased precipitation -
could switch off, slow down or divert the Conveyor. This dramatic
cooling would mean a massive disruption to European agriculture and
climate, and impact other sea currents and temperatures around the
globe.
More information:
Abrupt climate change – Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution