Role of the Overturning Circulation in Carbon Accumulation (ROCCA)
Lead Research Organisation:
National Oceanography Centre
Department Name: Science and Technology
Abstract
Human activities have caused atmospheric CO2 levels to increase dramatically, but their growth has been slowed by the oceans absorbing approximately one quarter of this anthropogenic carbon (Canth). Globally, the North Atlantic Ocean stores the highest quantities of Canth, due to local CO2 uptake from the atmosphere, and large-scale ocean currents, particularly the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) delivering waters high in Canth to northern locations where they cool, get denser and sink to great depths away from contact with the atmosphere.
Models project that the size of this carbon sink will reduce in the coming decades despite continued atmospheric CO2 increases, as surface warming increases stratification, decreases CO2 solubility, and AMOC weakening slows the transport of dense waters to depth. However there is substantial model spread regarding flux peak, and decline timing. The same models show a large range in ocean carbon transports, often related to AMOC representation. The balance between air-sea fluxes and ocean transports to North Atlantic Canth accumulation is thus not well constrained both now and into the future, and subject to large uncertainties.
Previous observational studies have attempted to quantify the contributions of these processes to Canth accumulation in order to assist with model verification and validation. However, it is not currently possible to directly measure anthropogenic air-sea CO2 fluxes - they are chemically identical to those with 'normal', non-human-derived CO2. And while they can be calculated indirectly from trans-ocean basin decadal repeat cruises, this approach is subject to large uncertainties. It is thus impossible to constrain why fluxes (or carbon transports) vary on shorter timescales, or how they interact with the AMOC. For this we require frequent estimates of ocean transports combined with frequent estimates of how quickly carbon concentrations are increasing in the ocean.
This project will look to do precisely that. Firstly, we will generate new high-resolution estimates of Canth transports across the subtropical and subpolar boundaries of the North Atlantic, relying on the outputs from the RAPID (10day) and OSNAP (monthly) mooring arrays. At RAPID, we will extend to 2024 the 2004-2013 time-series we published in 2021 and that identified a stable, northward Canth transport that was highly variable over all time scales (weekly, monthly, seasonally, annually, interannually), and highly correlated to the AMOC.
We will collect new sub-seasonal water samples in Florida Straits, at the western boundary. The waters that flow through the Straits represent the vast majority of the upper, northward-flowing part of the overturning circulation but we don't currently account for any variability in water mass characteristics (chemical or otherwise) in the transport calculation there, so are not fully characterising the AMOC:carbon coupling.
We'll generate a novel Canth transports time-series for 2014-2022 at the OSNAP, identifying how it co-varies with AMOC, and RAPID carbon transports. We'll track the changing interior (anthropogenic) carbon signal using novel, publicly-available datasets based on ship and autonomous platform data. Combined, we'll form a North Atlantic budget with transports at the southern and northern boundaries, and evolving concentrations in the interior. The residual will represent Canth entering (or leaving) through the surface - the air-sea flux.
The contributions of air-sea fluxes and ocean circulation to regional carbon accumulation will be determined, better understanding how, with AMOC, they work together to store carbon. The calculation scheme, its components and transport/air-sea flux/AMOC relationships will be tested in earth system models, before observations are compared to simulation outputs. Our findings will help improve the accuracy of climate models, which is crucial for predicting the effects of climate change.
Models project that the size of this carbon sink will reduce in the coming decades despite continued atmospheric CO2 increases, as surface warming increases stratification, decreases CO2 solubility, and AMOC weakening slows the transport of dense waters to depth. However there is substantial model spread regarding flux peak, and decline timing. The same models show a large range in ocean carbon transports, often related to AMOC representation. The balance between air-sea fluxes and ocean transports to North Atlantic Canth accumulation is thus not well constrained both now and into the future, and subject to large uncertainties.
Previous observational studies have attempted to quantify the contributions of these processes to Canth accumulation in order to assist with model verification and validation. However, it is not currently possible to directly measure anthropogenic air-sea CO2 fluxes - they are chemically identical to those with 'normal', non-human-derived CO2. And while they can be calculated indirectly from trans-ocean basin decadal repeat cruises, this approach is subject to large uncertainties. It is thus impossible to constrain why fluxes (or carbon transports) vary on shorter timescales, or how they interact with the AMOC. For this we require frequent estimates of ocean transports combined with frequent estimates of how quickly carbon concentrations are increasing in the ocean.
This project will look to do precisely that. Firstly, we will generate new high-resolution estimates of Canth transports across the subtropical and subpolar boundaries of the North Atlantic, relying on the outputs from the RAPID (10day) and OSNAP (monthly) mooring arrays. At RAPID, we will extend to 2024 the 2004-2013 time-series we published in 2021 and that identified a stable, northward Canth transport that was highly variable over all time scales (weekly, monthly, seasonally, annually, interannually), and highly correlated to the AMOC.
We will collect new sub-seasonal water samples in Florida Straits, at the western boundary. The waters that flow through the Straits represent the vast majority of the upper, northward-flowing part of the overturning circulation but we don't currently account for any variability in water mass characteristics (chemical or otherwise) in the transport calculation there, so are not fully characterising the AMOC:carbon coupling.
We'll generate a novel Canth transports time-series for 2014-2022 at the OSNAP, identifying how it co-varies with AMOC, and RAPID carbon transports. We'll track the changing interior (anthropogenic) carbon signal using novel, publicly-available datasets based on ship and autonomous platform data. Combined, we'll form a North Atlantic budget with transports at the southern and northern boundaries, and evolving concentrations in the interior. The residual will represent Canth entering (or leaving) through the surface - the air-sea flux.
The contributions of air-sea fluxes and ocean circulation to regional carbon accumulation will be determined, better understanding how, with AMOC, they work together to store carbon. The calculation scheme, its components and transport/air-sea flux/AMOC relationships will be tested in earth system models, before observations are compared to simulation outputs. Our findings will help improve the accuracy of climate models, which is crucial for predicting the effects of climate change.
Organisations
- National Oceanography Centre (Lead Research Organisation, Project Partner)
- Georgia Institute of Technology (Project Partner)
- Columbia University (Project Partner)
- ETH Zurich (Project Partner)
- University of Bern (Project Partner)
- French Inst for Ocean Science IFREMER (Project Partner)
- University of Miami (Project Partner)
- NORCE Norwegian Research Centre AS (Project Partner)
- CSIC Institute of Marine Research (Project Partner)
- University of Hamburg (Project Partner)
Publications
Johnson C
(2024)
Biogeochemical Properties and Transports in the North East Atlantic
in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans
| Description | 2024 - February - Subpolar North Atlantic Ocean Biogeochemistry and OSNAP Workshop |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Held alongside the Ocean Sciences conference in New Orleans, USA, on February 20th, 2024 0830-1330,the objectives of the workshop were to: 1) identify and strengthen synergies between the different international physical and biogeochemical programs focused on the high-latitude North Atlantic (both observational, analysis and modelling based) 2) and to develop strategies to leverage OSNAP as an observational and analysis platform to address ocean biogeochemistry questions C-Streams work and plans were presented here and led to multiple conversations and potential new collaborations |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| Description | AMOC explainer - website article |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Co-wrote descriptive article detailing hte importance of the AMOC to transporting heat, freshwater, nutrients and carbon, that was then set aside infromative graphics and animations |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://noc.ac.uk/under-the-surface/atlantic-meridional-overturning-circulation#:~:text=Support%20Us... |
| Description | Feature article on recovery of new BGC sensors from RAPID Eastern boundary mooring array |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Descriptive article about the recovery of new biogeochemical sensors that had been deployed on the RAPID Eastern boundary mooring array. The data from these sensors will be used to help improve estimates of carbon and nutrients across the subtropics by the AMOC. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://epoc-eu.org/back-from-the-deep/ |
| Description | Involvement in newsletter covering BGC sensors on RAPID Eastern boundary array |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A magazine, newsletter or online publication |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | Description of activity relating to recovery of new biogeochemical sensors from RAPID Eastern boundary mooring array, data from which will be involved in improving anthropogenic carbon transport estimates |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://epoc-eu.org/epoc-newsletter-2-now-out/ |
| Description | UK-US CCROC programme workshop March 2025 Liverpool |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Workshop bringing together experts in AMOC and its role in heat, freshwater, carbon and climate dynamics. Discussions held on future direction of research, engagement activities |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2025 |
