Dare
we hope that Mount Agung will spare the planet from rapid warming as
the present la-Nina appears to have failed to do?
If
it does I suspect that temperatures will shoot up very quickly when
the atmosphere clears – as with any other form of global dimming.
Bali’s fiery volcano could end up temporarily cooling the entire planet
But we don’t yet know by how much.
VOX,
30
November, 2017
On
the Indonesian island of Bali, a volcano called Mount Agung is
spewing ash 5.5
miles into the sky, causing flight cancellations
and trapping
thousands of tourists and locals on the island, even as the
potential for a bigger eruption looms.
Authorities reopened
Bali’s international airport Thursday
after closing it for three days due to fear of ash damage to aircraft
engines. The closures stranded close to 60,000 passengers and more
than 100,000 people near the volcano were told to evacuate
as explosions
were heard more
than 7 miles way.
Indonesia’s
National Disaster Management Authority (BNPB) warned Monday that
the eruptions
are increasing and declared the highest alert level for the
volcano. An Indonesian government scientist said a larger
eruption is possible, but also that the current levels of
lava, ash, sulfur, and carbon dioxide emissions could continue for
weeks. (You can see ongoing volcanic activity in Indonesia on
this live map.)
As
Denison University volcanologist Erik Klemetti noted on Twitter, no
one knows how the current eruption will pan out.
The eruption at #Agung in Indonesia has been relatively small so far, but with lava at the summit crater, it is anyone’s guess how it proceeds from here: blogs.discovermagazine.com/rockyplanet/20 …
Bali
has a tragic history with Mount Agung, as you can see in
this old-timey
newsreel(complete with offensive tropes about the indigenous
population):
In
1963, Mount Agung’s eruption killed more than 1,600 people on the
island over several months — and that was merely a “moderate”
eruption, Diana Roman, a geologist at the Carnegie Institution of
Washington, told the Washington
Post. So locals areunderstandably
unnerved.
But
beyond the threat of local devastation, the current eruption of Mount
Agung has the potential to impact the entire world.
A single volcano can mess with the whole planet’s climate
Scientists
have long understood that volcanic eruptions can nudge
the planet’s thermostat for months, as millions of tons of
gases and particles spread through the atmosphere.
How
much the needle moves, however, depends on what’s being erupted,
according to NASA climate scientist Chris Close.
“Most
eruptions do not have a meaningful climate impact, and so the risks
associated with the eruption are limited to the nearby population,”
he wrote in an email. “For climate, the big thing to pay attention
isn't the ash but the sulfur emissions.”
Gases
like sulfur dioxide spew from volcanic craters during an eruption,
hidden among billowing ash. These sulfur compounds react in the sky
to form substances that scatter sunlight, thereby cooling
the planet.
How
much a volcanic eruption cools the planet depends on the amount of
material it erupts, how high it reaches, and the composition of that
material. Eruptions can also change global
rainfall patterns.
Scientists
are also toying with the controversial idea of imitating
volcanoes to keep global warming in check, a strategy known
as geoengineering. This includes deliberately seeding clouds
or spraying
sulfuric acid into the stratosphere to offset some of
humanity’s impacts on the world’s climate.
We
don’t know yet whether the ongoing eruption in Bali will pump out
enough gas and ash to have a measurable impact on the climate, but we
do know that the 1963 eruption of Mount Agung knocked
down global temperatures between 0.1 and 0.2 degrees Celsius
for a year.
The
most recent volcanic eruption that pushed down the planet’s
temperature was Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines in 1991. That
eruption injected roughly 10 million metric tons of sulfur into the
sky. The 1963 Agung eruption emitted about 6 million metric tons of
sulfur.
Over
at Carbon
Brief, climate researcher Zeke Hausfather graphed what would
happen to global temperatures if the current Agung eruption were to
reach the same scale as the last one amid the current global warming
trend.
Global
mean surface temperatures fromclass="Apple-converted-space" Berkeley
Earth (black
dots), major volcanoes (shaded areas), and estimated temperatures
based on human and natural radiative forcing (red) with a 1963-size
Agung eruption in mid-2017 (blue). The baseline period is
1961-’90. Carbon Brie
“This
projection, which is based on the historical relationship between
volcanic eruptions and temperature, suggests that an Agung eruption
would reduce global temperatures between 0.1C to 0.2C in period from
2018 to 2020, with temperatures mostly recovering back to where they
otherwise would be by 2023,” Hausfather wrote.
The
chart shows that volcanoes leave distinct fingerprints in the global
temperature record. This is because volcanoes emit cooling sulfur
compounds straight into the stratosphere, though the
quantity is smaller than emissions from human activities,
which have longer-lasting effects on the climate.
However,
locals are more concerned
about the next few days, keeping an uneasy eye on their backyard
volcano and wearing surgical masks to ward off the ash.
Despite evacuation orders, they are wary of leaving their homes without alternative jobs and housing in place, so if the eruption suddenly gets worse, many will likely remain in harm’s way.
Despite evacuation orders, they are wary of leaving their homes without alternative jobs and housing in place, so if the eruption suddenly gets worse, many will likely remain in harm’s way.
"marc haneburght" climate state censorship - totally disappeared from youtube, facebook and twitter. Abrupt Global warming crack down!
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