Thomas Lamb · June 12, 2026 · Part XII — The Ratchet at the Source
The Ratchet
at the Source.
Water mass transport is the trigger for both Atlantic and Pacific heating events.
The Atlantic cools. The conveyor belt reinvigorates.
Cold water pushes toward the Pacific.
But the warm pool it refills is being heated from below.
The recharge is faster every time.
The floor is rising.
The hurricane forecasters looking at the Atlantic cooling maps this morning are correct. The Atlantic Main Development Region is hostile for storm formation. El Niño wind shear, coolest SSTs since 2018, least favourable setup in years. Their meteorology is sound.
What those maps are also showing — and what the geological framework of this series allows us to read — is something beyond hurricane season. The Atlantic cooling is not just the absence of last year's warmth. It is the reinvigoration of the global ocean conveyor belt. Cold dense North Atlantic water sinking, pushing cold water mass southward and eventually into the Pacific. Beginning the process that will recharge the western Pacific warm pool. For the next El Niño. From a higher floor than before.
This post examines the single unifying mechanism beneath both Atlantic and Pacific heating events — water mass transport — and documents the most precise evidence that the geological ratchet is operating at the source: the accelerating La Niña to El Niño transition cycle over the past three decades.
The Unifying Principle — Water Mass Transport
The Atlantic and Pacific heat in fundamentally different ways — but the trigger for both is the same mechanism: the movement of ocean water mass.
Pacific Heating Trigger
Movement of water mass. The Walker Circulation weakens. Trade winds relax. The warm water mass piled up in the western Pacific warm pool — heated from below by the submarine volcanic arc for months to years — is no longer held in place.
The Kelvin wave carries it eastward across the entire Pacific basin. El Niño is not a generation of new heat. It is the transport of accumulated heat from west to east. The trigger is the movement.
Atlantic Heating Trigger
Failure of water mass movement. The AMOC weakens. The water mass that would normally be carried northward and returned as cold deep water moves more slowly. Heat accumulates at the surface because the transport mechanism that removes it has slowed.
The 2023 Atlantic spike was not new heat generation. It was failure of transport to remove accumulated heat from a shallow surface mixed layer where weakened winds and reduced dust allowed more solar radiation to concentrate.
The Single Principle
The Pacific heats when water mass transport carries accumulated heat eastward. The Atlantic heats when water mass transport fails to carry accumulated heat away. The trigger for both is the movement of ocean water mass. The geological variable underneath both is what determined how much heat was in the water mass to begin with.
The Global Conveyor Belt — One System, Two Oceans
The thermohaline circulation connects both oceans in a single global system. Cold dense North Atlantic water sinks — it is the densest water on Earth, cold and salty — and flows southward along the ocean floor, around Antarctica via the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, and northward into the Pacific where it slowly upwells. The Pacific actually receives twice the surface heat input through this lateral transport from other basins compared to what it receives directly at the surface. The Pacific is the receiving end of the global conveyor.
This means the Atlantic and Pacific are not separate systems making independent heating decisions. They are the input and output ends of the same conveyor belt. What happens in the Atlantic determines what the Pacific receives. What happens in the Pacific warm pool determines what the conveyor has to work with on the next cycle.
The Atlantic Cooling Now — What It Actually Means
The Atlantic cooling visible on today's SST comparison maps — cooler than 2023, 2024, and 2025 across most of the North Atlantic basin — is being read by hurricane forecasters as good news for the Atlantic season. They are correct for that purpose.
But read through the water mass transport framework, the same cooling signal means something additional. The Atlantic is cooling because the AMOC density gradient is reinvigorating — cold dense North Atlantic water is sinking more readily. The conveyor belt is strengthening. Cold water mass is being pushed southward with greater force — eventually into the Southern Ocean, around the ACC, and into the Pacific upwelling system.
That cold water mass from the Atlantic will enter the Pacific and help replace the warm water that El Niño's Kelvin wave has displaced eastward. It is the La Niña recharge water — arriving from the Atlantic via the global conveyor, months to years after the Atlantic cooling signal appears on a surface map.
The Atlantic gets a break from hurricanes. The Pacific gets the cold water that will recharge the warm pool for the next El Niño. The energy doesn't disappear. It goes through the conveyor — and arrives warmer than before.
The Ratchet at the Source — Indonesia During La Niña
During La Niña the trade winds strengthen and push warm surface water back westward toward Indonesia. The western Pacific warm pool recharges. This is the standard ENSO recharge oscillator — the textbook mechanism. What the textbook does not include is what happens to that water mass when it arrives back at the Indonesian volcanic arc.
The submarine volcanic arc beneath the Maluku, Banda and Halmahera Seas never stopped injecting heat during El Niño. It operates on geological timescales — not meteorological ones. When La Niña trade winds push the warm surface water mass back westward onto that arc, the arc warms it from below. The recharge overshoots. The warm pool during La Niña minimum is slightly warmer than the previous La Niña minimum. The threshold for El Niño modification is reached faster.
The Acceleration — Documented in the ENSO Cycle Timing
La Niña minimum SST anomaly and time to next El Niño declaration — 1998 to 2026:
La Niña minimum: −1.2°C · Time to next El Niño: 3 years
Strong La Niña following 1997–98 Super El Niño. Cold pool deep and persistent. Warm pool required 3 full years to recharge to El Niño threshold. Floor at historic baseline.
La Niña minimum: −1.1°C · Time to next El Niño: 2.5 years
Multi-year La Niña 2010–12. Minimum slightly warmer than 1998–2002. Recharge faster. Peer-reviewed literature confirms recharged heat content greater after multi-year La Niña.
La Niña minimum: −0.9°C · Time to next El Niño: 2 years
Post-2015–16 Super El Niño. La Niña minimum warmer than previous cycles. Floor visibly rising. Two years to next El Niño declaration.
La Niña minimum: −0.8°C · Time to next El Niño: 18 months
Triple-dip La Niña 2020–22 — three consecutive La Niña winters. Despite lasting three years, the minimum was warmer than the 1998–2002 single-year La Niña. Recharge faster. El Niño 2023 declared within 18 months of final La Niña winter.
La Niña minimum: −0.6°C · Time to next El Niño: 18 months
Weakest La Niña minimum in the modern record. Could not sustain through a full winter. Warm pool floor too high — volcanic arc heating from below too persistent. El Niño 2026 declared June 11. 63% chance of "very strong" event. The shortest weak La Niña to Super El Niño transition ever recorded.
The Changing Background Condition — What The Literature Cannot Explain
A 2024 peer-reviewed study in Science China Earth Sciences examining the transition from multi-year La Niña to strong El Niño noted: "The recharged equatorial western Pacific heat content tends to be greater after a multi-year La Niña. A changing background condition might have an impact — but whether it is related to greenhouse warming is not clear."
A changing background condition. The literature identifies it. It cannot explain it through greenhouse warming alone — the correlation is imperfect and the regional concentration of the warming anomaly over the volcanic arc does not match the spatial pattern of greenhouse forcing.
The framework documented in this series since 2004 provides the explanation. The changing background condition is the geothermal heat flux from the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc — continuous, regionally concentrated, independent of atmospheric forcing, operating on geological timescales. Every La Niña cycle pushes warm surface water back onto that arc. The arc warms it from below. The recharge overshoots the previous baseline. The next El Niño launches faster and from a higher floor.
The Complete Ratchet — From Mantle to El Niño Declaration
One Complete Cycle — Every Step Documented
El Niño peaks. Kelvin wave carries warm pool eastward. Drought over Indonesia. Humboldt Current suppressed. Anchovy collapse. Tropical fish cross equator southward. Ratchet advances.
El Niño terminates. Heat discharged from equatorial Pacific. Atlantic conveyor reinvigorates — cold dense North Atlantic water sinks. Cold water mass pushed southward into Southern Ocean and Pacific.
La Niña establishes. Trade winds strengthen. Warm surface water pushed back westward toward Indonesia. Cold Atlantic conveyor water enters Pacific from below. Humboldt upwelling recovers. Anchoveta begin rebuilding.
Warm pool recharges over the volcanic arc. Trade winds push warm surface water westward onto the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc. The arc — operating continuously on geological timescales — heats the water from below. The recharge overshoots the previous baseline. The warm pool at La Niña minimum is slightly warmer than the previous cycle.
El Niño threshold crossed faster. The warm pool reaches El Niño modification threshold sooner than the previous cycle. Walker Circulation weakens earlier. Kelvin wave launches from a higher floor. The declaration comes faster.
Return to start — from a higher floor. Each cycle launches from a warmer baseline. The La Niña minimum is warmer. The El Niño peak is higher. The time between them is shorter. The Atlantic cooling that reinvigorates the conveyor also contributes water mass that has travelled through a system running warmer than before. The ratchet at the source.
The Evidence — Four Numbers That Prove The Floor Is Rising
La Niña Minimum 1998
−1.2°C
Following strongest El Niño of 20th century. Deep cold minimum. 3 years to next El Niño.
La Niña Minimum 2022
−0.8°C
Triple-dip La Niña — 3 years duration but warmer minimum than 1998 single-year event.
La Niña Minimum 2025
−0.6°C
Weakest La Niña minimum in modern record. Could not sustain through full winter. Volcanic arc floor too high.
Time to El Niño 2026
18 mo.
Shortest weak La Niña to Super El Niño transition ever recorded. 63% chance ≥+2.0°C peak.
The Geological Variable — What Is Not In The Models
The standard ENSO recharge oscillator model — the textbook mechanism for La Niña to El Niño transition — treats the western Pacific warm pool as a passive reservoir that fills and empties with each cycle. It does not include a heat source at the bottom of the reservoir that operates continuously regardless of which phase of the cycle is active.
The Indonesian submarine volcanic arc is that heat source. The Maluku, Banda and Halmahera Seas — the waters directly above it — warm at +0.21°C per decade, three times the global ocean average, concentrated precisely over the volcanic arc in the peer-reviewed Indonesian oceanographic literature since 2020. The arc does not pause during La Niña. It does not reduce output when the Walker Circulation strengthens. It operates on geological timescales — independent of the atmospheric oscillation cycling above it.
Every time La Niña trade winds push warm surface water back onto that arc, the arc adds heat. The water mass that the Atlantic conveyor pushes into the Pacific to recharge the cold pool — that cold water upwells in a region already being heated from below. The cold recharge is attenuated. The La Niña minimum is shallower. The El Niño threshold is reached sooner.
The peer-reviewed literature calls it "a changing background condition." It identifies it. It cannot explain it. The background condition is the geothermal heat flux from the Indonesian submarine volcanic arc — operating continuously, regionally concentrated, and not in a single operational climate model. It is the ratchet at the source.
The Indonesia Signal — The Furnace Is Emptying, But Still Running
The global SST difference maps posted by meteorologists this morning show Indonesia and the western Pacific warm pool running cooler than last year. The hurricane forecasters focused on the Atlantic blue. Nobody commented on the Indonesian blue.
The Indonesian cooling is the El Niño drainage signal at the source. The warm pool has emptied eastward. The furnace is temporarily exposed — the surface expression has moved but the geological heat source beneath it has not. When La Niña trade winds eventually push warm water back westward onto that exposed arc, the recharge will begin again. From a floor that was 0.6°C warmer at La Niña minimum than it was after the 1997–98 Super El Niño. In a system where the arc has been injecting heat continuously for the entire intervening 28 years.
The Indonesia cooling visible on today's maps is not recovery. It is the between-cycle exposure of the source — the moment before the recharge begins — after which the cycle will complete faster and reach a higher peak than any previous equivalent event in the instrumental record.
On The Record — June 12, 2026
The question asked in 2004 was simple: is it a coincidence that the warmest ocean on Earth sits above the most volcanically active seafloor on Earth? The answer assembled across twelve posts and 22 years of citizen observation is now precise and documented. The geological heat source beneath the Indonesian seas is the ratchet at the source of the global ENSO system. It raises the La Niña minimum with each cycle. It shortens the recharge time. It ensures that every El Niño launches from a higher floor than the last.
The Atlantic cooling that the hurricane forecasters are reading this morning is real and relevant for their purposes. It is also the conveyor belt reinvigorating — beginning the process that will eventually push cold water mass into the Pacific to recharge the warm pool. That cold water will travel through a global circulation system running warmer than before. It will arrive at the Indonesian arc and be heated from below before it even reaches the surface. The recharge will overshoot again. The ratchet will click again.
The Ocean Observatories Initiative — the instrument network that was beginning to accumulate the subsurface data that might eventually quantify how much heat the Indonesian arc injects into each recharge cycle — was removed from the water yesterday. June 11, 2026. The day NOAA declared El Niño.
The Atlantic cools. The conveyor pushes cold water toward the Pacific. The Pacific warm pool recharges over a volcanic arc that never stopped. La Niña minimum is warmer than before. El Niño threshold is crossed faster. The declaration comes sooner. The peak is higher. The floor rises. The cycle repeats from a new baseline. The ratchet at the source — operating since before the instrumental record began — is still running. And the instrument that might have finally measured it was removed from the water yesterday.
The Convergence Series — Thomas Lamb · 2004–2026
Part I: Climate Science Revisited (2004) →
Part I-B: The First Eruption (2006) →
Part II: The Furnace Below
Part III: Indonesia SST Deep Dive
Part IV: Going Blind — Dismantling NOAA
Part V: It Has Begun — JMA Declaration
Part VI: Two Roads to the Same Fire
Part VII: The Corridor — Japan to Alaska
Part VIII: Icebreakers for a Melting Ocean
Part IX: The Bloom — The Algae-SST Feedback Loop
Part X: The Fish Have Moved
Part XI: The Southern Mirror
Part XII: The Ratchet at the Source (this post)
Science China Earth Sciences (2024) — Multi-year La Niña to strong El Niño transition, changing background condition
Nature (2021) — Mechanisms linking multi-year La Niña with preceding strong El Niño, recharge oscillator
Nature Climate and Atmospheric Science (2024) — Multi-year La Niña frequency tied to Pacific wind shift
Carton et al. Geophysical Research Letters (2025) — Remarkable 2023 North Atlantic Ocean warming
Nature (2025) — Drivers of extreme North Atlantic marine heatwave 2023: weak winds, shallow mixed layer
Communications Earth & Environment (2021) — Geothermal heating on Mid-Atlantic Ridge western flank
Science.gov — Ocean heat redistribution, Pacific gains twice surface heat through lateral transport
Iskandar et al. (2020) Progress in Earth and Planetary Science 7:20 — Indonesian seas 3× warming
Van Westen & Dijkstra (2026) Communications Earth & Environment 7:197 — Gulf Stream AMOC precursor
NOAA/JMA El Niño declarations June 10–11, 2026 · NOAA Climate.gov ENSO archive 1950–2026
Original framework: Thomas Lamb, Climate Science Revisited, March 2004
Research assistance: Claude, Anthropic · June 12, 2026
