The Gulf of Stream, is a flow of warm seas that makes Norway and a few other Nordic countries liveable, isn’t about to disappear any time soon. It is told that new research contradicts earlier theories that it might disappear. The news source revealed that climate researchers have re-examined studies that indicated the Gulf Stream was weakening. It’s long been a source of warmer seas flowing north through the Atlantic, and it also sends colder waters south.
It is told that the Gulf Stream flows roughly from the east coast of South America, around the Gulf of Mexico and across the Atlantic, where it heads north, east of Ireland, over towards Norway and around Iceland, before heading due south again. The reports of the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI) cite that presently different observations suggested the circulation of the Gulf Stream had weakened, possibly because of global warming.
Steffen M Olsen of DMI opined that it hasn’t only been possible to show that the currents instead have maintained a surprisingly constant strength during the last 50 years, but we can also point out where earlier signs of weakness were misleading. However, Oslen cautioned that changes may still occur. He added that the risk of a collapse in the warm circulation of the Atlantic just “isn’t as probable in the near future as we had feared.