I don't think this would make any clouds at all.  You can have very humid air 
and no clouds or rain.  As far as the evaporation of water itself releasing 
sufficient IR to space, the levels of the water injection are too low: 
20-200ft.  Finally, I don't think the energy costs are correctly estimated.  It 
should take a lot more than the electricity from a 550MW power plant to 
simulate the flow of the Mississippi River.  Am I right or all wet, so to speak?

http://www.physorg.com/news148887530.html

Inventor's 'refrigeration system' for planet shows promise, but scientists are 
skeptical
December 19th, 2008 in Space & Earth science / Earth Sciences 


Ron Ace says that his breakthrough moments have come at unexpected times - 
while he lay in bed, eased his aging Cadillac across the Chesapeake Bay Bridge 
or steered a tractor around his rustic, five-acre property.

In the seclusion of his Maryland home, Ace has spent three years glued to the 
Internet, studying the Earth's climate cycles and careening from one epiphany 
to another - a 69-year-old loner with the moxie to try to solve one of the 
greatest threats to mankind.

Now, backed by a computer model, the little-known inventor is making public a 
U.S. patent petition for what he calls the most "practical, nontoxic, 
affordable, rapidly achievable" and beneficial way to curb global warming and a 
resulting catastrophic ocean rise.

Spray gigatons of seawater into the air, mainly in the Northern Hemisphere, and 
let Mother Nature do the rest, he says.

The evaporating water, Ace said, would cool the Earth in multiple ways: First, 
the sprayed droplets would transform to water vapor, a change that absorbs 
thermal energy near ground level; then the rising vapor would condense into 
sunlight-reflecting clouds and cooling rain, releasing much of the stored 
energy into space in the form of infrared radiation.

McClatchy Newspapers has followed Ace's work for three years and obtained a 
copy of his 2007 patent petition for what he calls "a colossal refrigeration 
system with a 100,000-fold performance multiplier."

"The Earth has a giant air-conditioning problem," he said. "I'm proposing to 
put a thermostat on the planet."

Although it might sound preposterous, a computer model run by an 
internationally known global warming scientist suggests that Ace's giant 
humidifier might just work.

Kenneth Caldeira, a climate scientist at the Carnegie Institution's Department 
of Global Ecology at Stanford University, roughly simulated Ace's idea in 
recent months on a model that's used extensively by top scientists to study 
global warming.

The simulated evaporation of about one-half inch of additional water everywhere 
in the world produced immediate planetary cooling effects that were projected 
to reach nearly 1 degree Fahrenheit within 20 or 30 years, Caldeira said.

"In the computer simulation, evaporating water was almost as effective as 
directly transferring ... energy to space, which was surprising to me," he said.

Ace said that the cooling effect would be several times greater if the model 
were refined to spray the same amount of seawater at strategic locations.

He proposes to install 1,000 or more devices that spray water 20 to 200 feet 
into the air, depending on conditions, from barren stretches of the West 
African coast, bluffs on deserted Atlantic Ocean isles, deserts adjoining the 
African, South American and Mediterranean coasts and other arid or windy sites. 
To maximize cloud formation, he'd avoid the already humid tropics, where most 
water vapor quickly turns to rain.

"It does seem like evaporating water outside the tropics would be more 
effective," Caldeira said.

The spraying would be targeted mainly at higher, northern latitudes, where Ace 
thinks that air currents known as Ferrel Cells could deliver heavy snow to the 
Arctic, offsetting the melting of the polar icecap.

It stretches the imagination - and perhaps credulity - to suggest that a 
solitary inventor with no government support could solve global warming, 
especially a man who never earned a degree despite studying physics for much of 
a decade at the University of Maryland.

Several scientists who reviewed Ace's patent petition for McClatchy reacted 
with caution to outright derision over its possibilities, but some softened 
their views upon learning of the computer model.

Ace's invention rests on some unconventional theories.

He contends that the planet is 5 to 6 degrees Fahrenheit too hot to stop the 
meltdown from the last ice age 20,000 years ago, not a couple of degrees too 
warm, as government scientists say. He proposes to lower the temperature by 3.5 
degrees to 4 degrees, leaving a cushion to avoid tipping toward another ice age 
and always retaining the option of turning the sprayers down or off, if needed.

He suspects that deforestation is a major cause of global warming, not just 
because trees absorb carbon dioxide, but also because a large-leaf tree can 
wick up and evaporate hundreds of gallons of water in a single day. Ace said 
that the absence of tens of billions of trees, destroyed by southward-creeping 
glaciers thousands of years ago and again by man's recent timber cutting, has 
left the planet "slightly dehumidified," reducing cloud cover.

Ace points to recent research that found snow cover is shrinking even at 
below-freezing altitudes on Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro and other mountaintops, 
a change that's attributed to declining snowfall.

It would be relatively easy to design spraying equipment to carry out his plan 
to fill that water vapor deficit, but it would take a major international 
effort to install 1,000 large spraying devices, or thousands of smaller ones. 
If fully deployed, the 15,800 cubic meters of sprayed water per second would be 
equivalent to the flow at the mouth of the Mississippi River and would require 
enough energy to power a medium-sized city.

However, spraying only a portion of that amount for a decade would be enough to 
cool the equivalent of current man-made global warming, estimated to range up 
to 0.76 degrees Fahrenheit, Ace said. Such cooling, he said, could buy mankind 
decades of time for more research and precision.

Depending on its scale, the water evaporation scheme would cost anywhere from 
hundreds of millions of dollars to billions of dollars a year, but Ace said it 
still would have "a net positive financial effect." It would prevent global 
warming-related damage, he said, and the extra rainfall would provide the 
cheapest way to transport water to drought-stricken regions, counteract desert 
expansions, increase natural irrigation for crops and boost the output of 
hydroelectric power plants.

Added rainfall also would reduce atmospheric greenhouse gas levels, because 
cold raindrops carry more carbon dioxide back to the oceans than is released 
when water evaporates, he said.

Caldeira's computer results could surprise many scientists because water vapor 
is a greenhouse gas widely recognized to be more powerful than carbon dioxide. 
The simulation suggests, however, that water vapor's cooling effects overwhelm 
its heat-trapping properties.

Ace has his doubters, partly because he took the patent route rather than 
submitting his idea for scientific peer review. A patent certifies that an 
invention is unique, not that it would work.

Douglas Davis, an atmospheric chemist at Georgia Tech University who's known 
Ace for years, lauded some of his inventions but called his global cooling idea 
"big-time speculation" because so little is known about the behavior of water 
in the atmosphere.

"In the case of the computer models that are used for global warming, I know 
that the hydrological cycle is a critical component of those models, and the 
hydrological cycle is not well understood," Davis said, stressing that he's not 
a climate expert.

David Travis, a University of Wisconsin-Whitewater professor who's studied 
clouds extensively, praised Ace's innovation, but said he's "generally opposed 
to geo-engineering" solutions and can't imagine evaporating water on a large 
enough scale to have a near-term effect.

Caldeira, who plans to submit his computer findings in the spring for 
peer-reviewed publication, is among scientists so concerned about sluggish 
progress in curbing greenhouse gases that they met last year to consider 
geo-engineering options.

"Ideas such as Ron Ace's should be carefully and impartially evaluated," 
Caldeira told McClatchy. "Every brilliant innovation in the history of 
technology looked a little bit loony when first proposed."

Ace's invention looks less loony when compared to some others. NASA scientists 
conceived the multitrillion-dollar idea of orbiting megaton mirrors in space to 
deflect sunlight. Other scientists have proposed reflecting solar energy by 
placing mirrors on thousands of high-altitude balloons, by foaming the oceans' 
surfaces or by filling the upper atmosphere with tiny sulfates or inert 
particles, or by adding water droplets to low-level ocean clouds from 1,500 
unmanned boats.

Ace said he thinks that mankind is "headed straight for a disaster."

By focusing solely on solutions that deal with carbon in the atmosphere, Ace 
thinks that mankind won't prevent a "big glacier melt" that could lift ocean 
levels 20 feet and wipe out the world's seaports.

One thing is certain: Ace is dead serious. He's tenaciously compiled more than 
a thousand pages of research, sometimes during all-night binges despite a fight 
with cancer. He said he's invested large sums in patenting his global-warming 
inventions.

Ace said he's created more than 700 inventions, starting with a 
gravity-measuring machine he built in seventh grade to record passes of the sun 
and moon on cloudy days. He's won nearly 70 U.S. and foreign patents, but said 
he's lacked the time and money to submit petitions for all but about two dozen 
of his inventions. None has led to big commercial success.

Ace said that his unusual blend of expertise in physics, optics and heat 
transfer has helped him understand the role of light-scattering clouds and 
water's influence on climate.

Maintaining a hermitlike existence during the past three years, he's churned 
out more than half a dozen inventions that could help curb global warming, 
including several that he said would cut energy use.

He often speaks in professorial tones, but can quickly morph into a cynic or a 
feisty debater over the laws of physics, always mindful of the role of "the big 
heater" - the sun.

Ace said that he gradually steeped himself in the science of global warming 
because of "curiosity, nothing more."

"I never saw myself making a dime on it," said Ace, who said he'd donate his 
patent to the U.S. government if he gets one. "It's mostly that the data seemed 
to be incorrect, and I wanted to know what is right."

___

ON THE WEB

The Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology: 
http://dge.stanford.edu/DGE/CIWDGE/CIWDGE.HTML

___

© 2008, McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. 
Visit the McClatchy Washington Bureau on the World Wide Web at 
www.mcclatchydc.com

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