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Tuesday, 23 January 2018

Of geengineering, ciimate change and global dimming

In one day two articles that confirm what Prof. Guy McPherson has been saying about the dangers of geoengineering and global dimming

We’re about to kill a massive, accidental experiment in reducing global warming
A forthcoming UN regulation will slash shipping industry pollution but may also speed up climate change.



22 January, 2018


Studies have found that ships have a net cooling effect on the planet, despite belching out nearly a billion tons of carbon dioxide each year. That’s almost entirely because they also emit sulfur, which can scatter sunlight in the atmosphere and form or thicken clouds that reflect it away.

In effect, the shipping industry has been carrying out an unintentional experiment in climate engineering for more than a century. Global mean temperatures could be as much as 0.25 ˚C lower than they would otherwise have been, based on the mean “forcing effect” calculated by a 2009 study that pulled together other findings (see “The Growing Case for Geoengineering”). For a world struggling to keep temperatures from rising more than 2 ˚C, that’s a big helping hand.

And we’re about to take it away.

In 2016, the UN’s International Maritime Organization announced that by 2020, international shipping vessels will have to significantly cut sulfur pollution. Specifically, ship owners must switch to fuels with no more than 0.5 percent sulfur content, down from the current 3.5 percent, or install exhaust cleaning systems that achieve the same reduction, Shell noted in a brochure for customers.

There are very good reasons to cut sulfur: it contributes to both ozone depletion and acid rain, and it can cause or exacerbate respiratory problems.

But as a 2009 paper in Environmental Science & Technology noted, limiting sulfur emissions is a double-edged sword. “Given these reductions, shipping will, relative to present-day impacts, impart a ‘double warming’ effect: one from [carbon dioxide], and one from the reduction of [sulfur dioxide],” wrote the authors. “Therefore, after some decades the net climate effect of shipping will shift from cooling to warming.”

Suddenly stopping geoengineering would be dangerous. Which is why doing so is unlikely.

Sulfur pollution from coal burning has a similar effect. Some studies suggest that China’s surge in coal consumption over the last decade partly offset the recent global warming trend (though coal does have a strong net warming effect).

It’s difficult to estimate how much the new rule could affect temperatures. We don’t know enough about cloud physics and the behavior of atmospheric particles, nor how diligently the shipping industry will comply with the new rule, says Robert Wood, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Washington.

Another wrinkle is that ships emit other particles that can sometimes also stimulate cloud droplets to form, including black carbon, a major component of soot. Removing the sulfur from the fuel could alter the size and quantity of these particles, which could affect clouds as well, says Lynn Russell, a professor of atmospheric science at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

So we can’t really say exactly what the change will be,” says Russell, though she adds that the rule change is “likely” to produce a warming effect on balance.

The upcoming change does offer a different way of thinking about intentional efforts to cool the climate, known as geoengineering, according to some proponents of research in this area. Rather than some radical experiment, deliberate geoengineering could instead be seen as a way of continuing to do what we’ve been doing inadvertently with ships, but in a safer way.


Amazon’s cashier-less Seattle grocery store is opening to the public
Sulfur emissions cool the planet in two ways, directly and indirectly. The direct way is that when sulfur dioxide is further oxidized in the atmosphere, it can form particles that reflect sunlight back into space. This happens in large volcanic eruptions, which can release tens of millions of tons of sulfur dioxide.

The indirect way is that sulfur particles can also act as nuclei around which cloud droplets form. Clouds, too, reflect more sunlight. You can see this in satellite images, which show lines of white clouds above the ocean along busy shipping lanes.

Geoengineering researchers have explored both processes, but with less toxic particles, as potential ways to alter the climate (see “Scientists Consider Brighter Clouds to Preserve the Great Barrier Reef”).

For instance, researchers with the Marine Cloud Brightening Project, centered at the University of Washington, have spent years studying the possibility of spraying tiny salt particles into the sky along coastlines to induce cloud droplets to form. The group has spent the last few years attempting to raise several million dollars to build the sort of sprayers that would be needed, in the hopes of carrying out small-scale field experiments somewhere along the Pacific coastline.

Both Russell and Wood said the upcoming rule change could also offer a chance to conduct some basic climate science by observing the interactions between airborne particles and clouds. Those insights could make climate simulations more accurate—how clouds behave is one of the least understood parts of the system, Wood says—as well as informing the debate about whether and how to carry out geoengineering.

But that all depends on whether scientists can get funding for such research, which will require more frequent satellite observations and surface sensors. Ideally, the research should start before the new rule goes into effect to ensure an accurate picture of how things change.

We’re approaching dangerous thresholds of temperature increases, so an additional bump of 0.1 or 0.2 degrees is something that we as a civilization should be watching really, really closely,” says Kelly Wanser, principal director with the Marine Cloud Brightening Project.

Whether the money will be available is less clear. Certain nations have been increasing funding levels for climate research. But it’s become far more difficult to secure such grants in the United States under the Trump administration, which specifically sought to cut NASA programs that monitor clouds and airborne particles.

"NATO and the United States should change their policy because the time when they dictate their conditions to the world has passed," Ahmadinejad said in a speech in Dushanbe, capital of the Central Asian republic of Tajikistan


A disastrous tactic against climate change
As the world struggles with how to keep climate change to the Paris accord goal of below 2C, scientists look to technologies such as solar geoengineering as a way to cool the planet. However, new research shows suddenly ceasing the method could be more disastrous for biodiversity than never starting. Farah Hancock reports.


22 January, 2018


In 1991, when Mount Pinatubo erupted, 20 million tonnes of sulphur dioxide was propelled into the stratosphere. In the two years that followed, the global average temperate fell by half a degree.

The cooling effect of the eruption is something scientists theorise could be replicated by planes regularly spreading sulphate aerosol. Spread high enough, the tiny particles absorb and reflect sunlight back into space for years.

While planes spraying chemicals to cool the earth may sound like something from a conspiracy theorist’s top 10, solar geoengineering is being taken seriously. Universities in England have collaborated in a 'Stratospheric Particle Injection for Climate Engineering' project since 2010. In the US, Harvard University has a Solar Geoengineering Research Program which has received funding from Bill Gates.

A United Nations report published in October last year says we are a long way off reaching Paris accord targets. Existing national goals will only meet one third of the emissions reduction target.

With emissions targets looking unlikely, geoengineering is receiving increased policy attention as a potential tool to slow climate change.

What’s more, it could be cheaper to implement than cutting emissions.

Professor of applied physics at Harvard University, David Keith, is a long-time proponent of solar geoengineering. He estimates starting an annual spraying programme would take just 10 Gulfstream jets and, “could be deployed in a few years for the price of a Hollywood blockbuster”.

Stopping once you have begun, however, is a not as simple as grounding planes. Stop suddenly and the planet warms up faster than before.

With low set-up cost and a lack of regulatory constraints, starting a programme may be easy. It’s something a single country could do. Stopping once you have begun, however, is not as simple as grounding planes. Stop suddenly and the planet warms up faster than before.

A scenario where solar geoengineering is stopped abruptly after a 50-year programme of spraying is the subject of new research by the University of Maryland, published in Nature Ecology & Evolution.

The research suggests suddenly ceasing solar geoengineering could raise land temperatures by 0.8C in a decade, causing changes in local climates two to four times more rapid than those caused by climate change itself.

The rapid change could be disastrous for biodiversity.

Species will be forced to adapt or move to find a climate they can survive in to avoid extinction. For many species, the climate change will come quicker than they will be able to adapt to, or they will struggle to find somewhere with the right temperature and the right amount of rain.

Areas rich in biodiversity, such as tropical oceans and the Amazon basin, are most likely to be affected negatively.

The research, modelled on sulphate injection at the equator, shows effects for New Zealand. Both the middle of the North Island and the top of the South Island would experience a spike of climate change of at least double the rate of that with no solar engineering intervention.

The research notes more work needs to be done to understand exactly which species would be the most likely to be impacted, but birds, fish, reptiles and to some extent, mammals, would be affected. Different species may also adapt and move at different rates, effectively collapsing established ecosystems.

The research concludes aggressive cuts in emissions remain the best way to avoid biodiversity loss and calls for extreme caution in the development of any policy around geoengineering.

Keith, the Harvard University advocate for geoengineering, says he believes emission cuts will only moderate, not reverse, climate change and we should be moving towards solar geoengineering as quickly as possible.

He is planning to conduct small-scale tests this year, using a hot air balloon, to spread various substances.

In his book, A case for climate engineering, Keith says it is a hard choice:

Deliberately adding one pollutant to temporarily counter another is a brutally ugly technical fix, yet that is the essence of the suggestion that sulphur be injected into the stratosphere to limit the damage of the carbon we pumped into the air.”



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