We analyze the ability of an oceanic monitoring array to detect potential changes in the North Atlantic meridional overturning
circulation (MOC). The observing array is ‘deployed’ into a numerical model (ECHAM5/MPI-OM), and simulates the measurements
of density and wind stress at 26
°N in the Atlantic. The simulated array mimics the continuous monitoring system deployed in the framework of the UK Rapid Climate
Change program. We analyze a set of three realizations of a climate change scenario (IPCC A1B), in which – within the considered
time-horizon of 200 years – the MOC weakens, but does not collapse. For the detection analysis, we assume that the natural
variability of the MOC is known from an independent source, the control run. Our detection approach accounts for the effects
of observation errors, infrequent observations, autocorrelated internal variability, and uncertainty in the initial conditions.
Continuous observation with the simulated array for approximately 60 years yields a statistically significant (p < 0.05) detection
with 95 percent reliability assuming a random observation error of 1 Sv (1 Sv = 10
6 m
3 s
−1). Observing continuously with an observation error of 3 Sv yields a detection time of about 90 years (with 95 percent reliability).
Repeated hydrographic transects every 5 years/ 20 years result in a detection time of about 90 years/120 years, with 95 percent
reliability and an assumed observation error of 3 Sv. An observation error of 3 Sv (one standard deviation) is a plausible
estimate of the observation error associated with the RAPID UK 26
°N array.