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Home Science News Earth Science

Clouds Amplify Winter Atmospheric Blocking in Euro-Atlantic

November 5, 2025
in Earth Science
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In a groundbreaking new study published in Nature Communications, researchers have unveiled pivotal insights into the complex interplay between cloud radiative effects and atmospheric blocking events over the Euro-Atlantic sector during wintertime. This work represents a significant leap forward in our understanding of how clouds influence large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns that profoundly affect weather extremes across Europe and North America. Atmospheric blocking events are persistent high-pressure systems that disrupt typical atmospheric flows, often leading to prolonged weather extremes such as cold spells or heatwaves. The study’s findings shed light on the critical role that cloud-induced radiative processes play in modulating the frequency and intensity of these blocking phenomena, suggesting important implications for climate modeling and weather prediction.

Atmospheric blocking has long challenged meteorologists due to its sporadic nature and substantial socio-economic impacts. These events can last for several days or even weeks, effectively halting the west-to-east progression of mid-latitude weather systems. The Euro-Atlantic sector, encompassing much of western Europe and the North Atlantic, is known for frequent occurrences of blocking during the winter months, leading to extreme weather conditions such as heavy snowfall, cold air outbreaks, and droughts in affected regions. Until now, the underlying mechanisms that control the variability of blocking events have been incompletely understood, particularly the role of clouds which represent one of the largest uncertainties in atmospheric physics.

The research team, led by Lubis et al., employed cutting-edge climate models to analyze the radiative impacts of cloud cover in the atmosphere’s mid-to-upper levels during winter. Cloud radiative effects refer to the way clouds absorb, scatter, and emit radiation, thereby influencing the atmospheric energy budget. These effects can alter temperature gradients, which in turn affect jet stream patterns and the development or persistence of blocking highs. By integrating sophisticated cloud parameterizations into a state-of-the-art global model, the team was able to isolate the influence of clouds on atmospheric blocking from other confounding factors such as sea surface temperature or external forcing.

Their simulations revealed a pronounced increase in the frequency of wintertime blocking events when cloud radiative effects were fully represented. The presence of clouds appears to enhance the thermal contrast between the polar and mid-latitude regions, thereby strengthening the atmospheric stationary waves that foster blocking development. Specifically, the results indicated that clouds contribute to a more persistent blocking regime by stabilizing the upper troposphere and reducing the tendency for storm systems to break through these high-pressure barriers. This mechanism was most prominent over the Euro-Atlantic sector, a critical region for weather impacting densely populated areas.

Crucially, this study also highlights how previous climate models that overlooked or underrepresented cloud radiation interactions might have systematically underestimated the occurrence and intensity of atmospheric blocking. This underestimation could have serious ramifications for seasonal weather forecasting and climate projections, particularly as atmospheric circulation patterns are projected to evolve under anthropogenic climate change. By better accounting for cloud radiative influences, models can more accurately simulate blocking dynamics, potentially improving forecasts of extreme cold spells or prolonged dry periods that heavily affect agriculture, energy demand, and infrastructure resilience.

The findings carry implications far beyond the scientific climate research community. Meteorologists and policymakers alike stand to benefit from these insights, as blocking events are often associated with costly disasters, from severe floods caused by stalled storms to extended cold snaps that strain public health systems. Understanding the cloud-related mechanisms that modulate blocking could inform more effective early-warning systems and adaptive strategies in the face of changing weather regimes. Furthermore, this research underscores the importance of high-resolution satellite observations of clouds, which are critical for validating and refining radiative models.

Another remarkable aspect of the study is how it opens a new avenue for investigating climate feedback processes. Clouds are known to serve as both a warming and cooling agent in the Earth’s climate system, depending on their type, altitude, and thickness. This duality complicates climate sensitivity assessments and projection of future climatic shifts. By explicitly linking cloud radiative effects to atmospheric blocking, the study provides a nuanced understanding of how these elusive particles mediate large-scale weather patterns and might influence extreme event statistics in a warming world.

The study also utilized detailed regional analyses to pinpoint where cloud radiative effects have the most substantial impact. The Euro-Atlantic sector was a focal point due to its vulnerability and the dense population it supports. The researchers demonstrated that blocking events intensified by clouds lead to altered atmospheric circulation that affects areas as far afield as eastern North America and western Europe. This spatial extent of influence reinforces the notion that local cloud processes can have far-reaching consequences on hemispheric weather patterns, a finding that could redefine regional climate risk assessments.

Methodologically, the study exemplifies the power of coupling observational data with advanced numerical models. The researchers leveraged satellite-based cloud property datasets alongside atmospheric reanalyses to validate their modeling framework, ensuring robustness in their conclusions. They conducted sensitivity experiments isolating cloud radiative impacts from other factors, a crucial step in attributing causality in complex climate systems. This methodological rigor enhances confidence that the observed enhancements in blocking frequency are attributable to cloud radiative processes rather than model artifacts or external forcings.

In the context of climate change, the study’s insights are particularly prescient. As global temperatures rise, cloud distributions and properties are expected to shift, though predictions remain uncertain. The enhanced understanding that clouds exacerbate blocking frequency in winter months suggests a potential increase in disruptive weather extremes associated with stationary high-pressure systems, even in a warming world. This introduces an important feedback mechanism for climate projections, whereby changes in cloud behavior could amplify or offset other temperature-driven effects on atmospheric circulation.

From a broader geophysical perspective, the interplay between clouds and atmospheric blocking revealed by this work contributes to the fundamental knowledge of Earth system dynamics. It exemplifies how seemingly small-scale atmospheric features—cloud droplets and ice crystals—can cascade through the climate system to influence large, persistent weather patterns. Such insights are critical for advancing Earth system science, improving our predictive capabilities, and informing sustainable responses to environmental change.

Lastly, this research calls attention to the imperative for improved cloud parameterizations in climate models. Despite decades of advancements, cloud processes remain one of the largest sources of uncertainty in climate science. The demonstrated impact of cloud radiative effects on blocking stresses the need for targeted research and investment in both observational campaigns and model development. Only through such efforts can the scientific community hope to unravel the complexities of cloud-climate interactions and reduce uncertainty in future climate risk assessments.

In conclusion, Lubis and colleagues have delivered a seminal contribution that redefines the role of clouds in shaping major wintertime weather patterns over the Euro-Atlantic region. By convincingly demonstrating that cloud radiative effects significantly increase atmospheric blocking frequency, this study challenges prevailing assumptions and highlights a crucial atmospheric feedback previously underappreciated. Their work not only advances physical understanding but also carries profound implications for forecasting, climate projection, and policy planning amid an increasingly variable and extreme climate. The findings are poised to catalyze renewed research on cloud dynamics and their integration into the broader climate system, ultimately enhancing our resilience to weather extremes that remain some of the most challenging hazards of our time.


Subject of Research: Atmospheric blocking and cloud radiative effects in the Euro-Atlantic region during wintertime.

Article Title: Cloud radiative effects significantly increase wintertime atmospheric blocking in the Euro-Atlantic sector.

Article References:
Lubis, S.W., Harrop, B.E., Lu, J. et al. Cloud radiative effects significantly increase wintertime atmospheric blocking in the Euro-Atlantic sector. Nat Commun 16, 9763 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-64672-9

Image Credits: AI Generated

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-64672-9

Tags: atmospheric blocking eventsclimate modeling implicationscloud radiative effectscloud-induced radiative processescold spells and heatwavesEuro-Atlantic climate dynamicsEuro-Atlantic winter weatherlarge-scale atmospheric circulationmid-latitude weather systemspersistent high-pressure systemssocio-economic impacts of weatherweather extremes in Europe
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