Published on: December 23, 2025

SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON ‘ANOMALY’

SOUTHERN OCEAN CARBON ‘ANOMALY’

NEWS

  • A new study (October, Nature Climate Change) reports that the Southern Ocean has absorbed more carbon dioxide since the early 2000s, contradicting long-standing climate model projections.
  • This unexpected behaviour highlights gaps between model predictions and real-world observations.

HIGHLIGHTS

Significance of the Southern Ocean

  • Covers 25–30% of global ocean area.
  • Accounts for ~40% of oceanic absorption of human-emitted CO₂.
  • Acts as a major climate buffer due to cold surface waters and strong circulation.

What Climate Models Predicted

  • Rising greenhouse gases → stronger westerly winds.
  • Stronger winds → enhanced upwelling of carbon-rich deep waters.
  • Result → release of CO₂ to the atmosphere and weakening of the oceanic carbon sink.

What Observations Revealed

  • Deep waters are rising (by ~40 m since the 1990s), consistent with models.
  • Subsurface CO₂ pressure increased (~10 microatmospheres).
  • Yet, atmospheric CO₂ release did not occur; instead, carbon uptake increased.

The Missing Link: Surface Freshwater Stratification

  • Increased rainfall and Antarctic ice melt freshened surface waters.
  • Fresher water is lighter → stronger stratification.
  • This created a “freshwater lid”, trapping carbon-rich waters 100–200 m below the surface.
  • Models underestimated small-scale processes (eddies, ice-shelf cavities) and data scarcity.

Why This Is a Temporary Reprieve

  • Since the mid-2010s, surface salinity is rising again in parts of the Southern Ocean.
  • Stratified layer is becoming shallower and weaker.
  • Strong winds may soon mix deep carbon-rich waters to the surface.
  • The model-predicted weakening of the carbon sink may re-emerge abruptly.

Key Takeaways

  • Models are not wrong but incomplete; they reveal vulnerabilities.
  • Observations explain exceptions and short-term deviations.
  • Highlights the need for continuous, year-round ocean monitoring.
  • Prelims Angle: Role of oceans as carbon sinks; upwelling vs stratification.