- Smith, DM;
- Eade, R;
- Andrews, MB;
- Ayres, H;
- Clark, A;
- Chripko, S;
- Deser, C;
- Dunstone, NJ;
- García-Serrano, J;
- Gastineau, G;
- Graff, LS;
- Hardiman, SC;
- He, B;
- Hermanson, L;
- Jung, T;
- Knight, J;
- Levine, X;
- Magnusdottir, G;
- Manzini, E;
- Matei, D;
- Mori, M;
- Msadek, R;
- Ortega, P;
- Peings, Y;
- Scaife, AA;
- Screen, JA;
- Seabrook, M;
- Semmler, T;
- Sigmond, M;
- Streffing, J;
- Sun, L;
- Walsh, A
The possibility that Arctic sea ice loss weakens mid-latitude westerlies, promoting more severe cold winters, has sparked more than a decade of scientific debate, with apparent support from observations but inconclusive modelling evidence. Here we show that sixteen models contributing to the Polar Amplification Model Intercomparison Project simulate a weakening of mid-latitude westerlies in response to projected Arctic sea ice loss. We develop an emergent constraint based on eddy feedback, which is 1.2 to 3 times too weak in the models, suggesting that the real-world weakening lies towards the higher end of the model simulations. Still, the modelled response to Arctic sea ice loss is weak: the North Atlantic Oscillation response is similar in magnitude and offsets the projected response to increased greenhouse gases, but would only account for around 10% of variations in individual years. We further find that relationships between Arctic sea ice and atmospheric circulation have weakened recently in observations and are no longer inconsistent with those in models.