A
 new study by US scientists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst 
found that the amount of fresh water cycling through the Arctic is 
increasing due to global warming. This has raised the concern that the 
large volumes of ice melt from Greenland and other sources could dilute 
the normally salty Arctic waters to the point that the circulation of 
the North Atlantic, also known as the thermohaline circulation, could be
 slowed or even halted, with disastrous consequences for the global 
climate. 
Explaining this immense potential tipping point in a 
telephone interview with Supreme Master Television was Professor Anders 
Levermann from Potsdam University, a senior researcher at the Potsdam 
Institute of Climate Impact Research in Germany and the lead author of 
the Sea Level Change chapter for the coming 5th report of the 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).
Professor Anders Levermann – Senior researcher, Potsdam Institute of Climate Impact Research, Germany (M):
 If you put additional fresh water into the North Atlantic by melting 
Greenland or by having more discharge from Siberian rivers, then you can
 freshen the North Atlantic so strongly that there won’t be any sinking 
of water anymore, and that would disrupt this thermohaline circulation, 
and could make it stop. Because there’s so much heat transport 
associated with this thermohaline circulation, it’s going to disturb the
 entire climate system.
VOICE: The thermohaline circulation acts 
as the “conveyor belt” bringing heat from the lower to higher parts of 
the northern hemisphere. A collapse of this vital system could decrease 
North Atlantic temperatures by up to 8 degrees Celsius, severely 
affecting agriculture in Europe. Sea level rise and disrupted ecosystems
 and rainfall patterns are the other consequences that could hugely 
impact human life.
Professor Anders Levermann (M):
 The estimates are such that this kind of sea level rise that we would 
get from the collapse of the thermohaline circulation would be 10 times,
 20 times quicker than what we see at the moment. The sea level would, 
more or less, instantaneously rise in the North Atlantic by up to a 
meter. Then, you disrupt the heat uptake of the ocean, which would 
further increase global warming. 
Then the rain belt in the 
tropics would shift by a few hundreds kilometers. If you look where 
people live in West Africa, and also in the Amazon region, then this is 
where the rainfall is, and that would change enough to disturb these 
communities.
VOICE: We thank Professor Levermann and Potsdam 
Institute for Climate Impact Research colleagues as well as the 
University of Massachusetts Amherst scientists for alerting us to this 
potential catastrophe of the ocean as it affects the ecosphere. May we 
act swiftly to avert such disastrously large-scale changes and protect 
lives. During a September 2009 videoconference in Peru, as on many 
previous occasions, Supreme Master Ching Hai urged for direct action 
that effectively addresses such complex climate problems at their root.
Supreme Master Ching Hai :
 We are not ready for the changes that are coming. We are not ready at 
all. We are not prepared enough. Some of the changes are even 
anticipated to be unexpected, because there are many complicated 
interacting factors. The wisest action would be to fix the situation we 
have now and prevent further damage, then we won’t even have to worry 
about the future. 
The smartest way would be to stop the 
worsening of global warming by being vegan. It sounds very simple but it
 is the best solution, the most effective and the effect of it will be 
felt almost immediately. So please, before the situation gets any more 
out of hand - let’s choose the vegan diet.
http://www.newswise.com/articles/arctic-freshwater-cycle-intensifies-marks-warming http://www.pik-potsdam.de/news/press-releases/archive/2005/changes-in-ocean-circulation-could-lead-to-rapid-regional-sea-level-change http://www.pik-potsdam.de/~anders/