Although the article seems to suggest there is an accompanying video, I 
couldn't find it.

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/12/29/aerosols-climate-change.html




Climate Change Battlefield | Discovery News Video 

Dec. 29, 2008 -- It won't solve global warming, but a group of scientists are 
calling for a focused research program to investigate ways to seed the 
atmosphere with chemicals that would let the heat out -- literally. 

Geoengineering is not a new concept. Governments have changed how and where 
water flows, filled in lakes and other wetlands for construction, even 
attempted to control the weather. A project to counter climate change, however, 
would take geoengineering to an entirely new level. 

Leaving aside what may be insurmountable political, cultural and ethical 
issues, scientists meeting at the American Geophysical Conference in San 
Francisco earlier this month focused on the practical aspects of releasing 
gases into the stratosphere that could open Earth's greenhouse. 

Scientists are concerned that Earth is growing increasingly warm due to 
"greenhouse gases," such as carbon dioxide, in the atmosphere that inhibit the 
planet's ability to radiation heat into space. 


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Human-related activities, such as burning fossil fuels, are believed to be 
accelerating the planet's accumulation of greenhouse gases, even though 
naturally occurring phenomena such as volcanic eruptions and fires account for 
97 percent of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. 

"Even if we stopped emissions instantly today...we still have enough CO2 in the 
atmosphere that it is possible we would have unacceptable levels of climate 
risk," said David Keith, with the University of Calgary's Energy and 
Environmental Systems Group. 

"While we may be lucky and find climate only warms by a degree or so, we may be 
unlucky and find it's more like five or six (degrees)," he added. "We're not 
going to know until we've put enough CO2 to make an irreversible decision." 

Keith and colleagues want to investigate putting aerosols, such as sulfur, into 
the atmosphere to chemically unlock the greenhouse effect and allow more of the 
sun's reflected heat to radiate back into space. 

"This brings up the question of who would make that decision," said Alan Robock 
of Rutgers University. And what temperature the world should be. 

"A ski slope operator and someone running a shipping company in the Arctic 
might have different opinions about what's the ideal temperature for the 
planet," NASA's administrator Michael Griffin told Discovery News in an 
interview last year. [Too bad he's leaving, isn't it?  AG]

>From an engineering standpoint, scientists have looked at a variety of systems 
>to deliver the goods, including high-altitude aircraft, such the military's 
>KC135 tankers used to refuel fighter jets, balloons, artillery, even a space 
>elevator. [Although Alan Robock mentioned the much maligned and non-existent 
>space elevator in his recent presentations, no one has proposed using it to 
>deliver stratospheric aerosol precusor or evaluated its potential.  AG]

Other options include lacing commercial airlines' jet fuel with 
sulfur-containing particles, though this likely would give rise to a host of 
new problems, including engine contamination and safety concerns. 

"No one has actually looked at what would happen if you tried to put these 
materials into the stratosphere," said Richard Turco, with the Department of 
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences at the University of California in Los 
Angeles. [Actually, there has now been quite a lot of modeling done, so this is 
misleading.  More modeling is needed, however.  AG]

Scientists disagreed on whether atmospheric seeding to change the climate could 
be successful on a regional level, or if any initiatives must be globally based 
to be effective. They were united, however, in calling for a focused research 
effort. 

"There's very little funded research (about) managing the risks of climate 
change," Keith said. [Something we can all agree on at the end of the year.  AG]

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

<<inline: airplane-324x205.jpg>>

Reply via email to