Is the Golfstrem going to change it's course?

Kim Holmén:  Yes, there are some indications that the Golfstream is changing it's course. The warm  water from the south might not come up to Scandinavia if the ice of Greenland is starting to melt. A lot of lighter freshwater will be at the surface and won't sink. No more water from the south will come up here then. The Golfstream might then go to the Iberian peninsula. 
We might be going towards a new ice age if the global temperature gets highera. 
But for us here in Scandinavia it might as I already had said, get cooler.                    
Scientists has drilled in Greenland, and they have shown that this kind of temperature loops probably had happened before, and as fast as just 10 years.
The type of climate that we have today is just about 5% of the last 2 million years. It's quiet warm now compared to other ages.
By the way, has this something to do with El Niño?
Kim Holmén: Don't know, but I can tell you little about El Niño. It is a climate phenomenon that appears like every 4th year. The name is after Jesus. The biggest effect is the one that makes the water quiet hot, especially at the coast of Chile and Peru. The warm water makes it rain a lot and the winds stops to blow in the Pacific Ocean. 
The last El Niño lasted for four years. Scientists think that El Niño has something to do with volcanoes . After a volcanic eruption at the Philippines summer '91 El Niño started and lasted to '95. The longest El Niño at the 20th century. 
Do you think that the North and South pole will melt like in Waterworld™ ?
Kim Holmén:  If the poles would melt, it isn't enough to cover the whole earth. It is only 2% of all water on the world in the poles. Maybe the water level will rise 100 meters or so, but not more.
It will take a long time for the earth to be totally covered with water.  

    Source: geocities.com/yyaahho