All:

These comments about aerosol movement from an Arctic event are right. 
Indeed, this issue of maybe affecting the monsoon is another SIDE 
ASPECT to consider in experiments. The Arctic strategy assumes there 
will be maybe a dozen parameters we can tune for a range of effects.

Rather than the oft bespoke worry over such a complicated system, it's 
reassuring that we have so many ways to adjust the aerosols, and so 
manage the Arctic. It will be the event that shows in detail what 
issues will occur on the global cooling strategies that are going to 
follow. A successful Arctic management will be the anti-geoengineering 
groups' nightmare.

My experience of them is that they fear the Arctic agenda will work, 
not that it won't.

Gregory Benford

-----Original Message-----
From: John Nissen <[email protected]>
To: Alvia Gaskill <[email protected]>; Andrew Lockley 
<[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]; 
[email protected]; [email protected]
Sent: Sun, 10 May 2009 4:21 pm
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Balancing the pros and cons of geoengineering

I've been trying to find out the extent of the
"disaster" of monsoon failure from Pinatubo but drawn a blank.  What 
does
seem to cause less precipitation is an El Niño. 
If we were to find that our polar aerosols were spreading towards 
subtropics20AND
there was a particularly strong El Niño,
then we might decide to halt their deployment.
 
On
the whole, global warming has caused increased precipitation over land, 
as land
has warmed faster than sea, so there is more updraft to suck up the 
moist air
 from the sea.  Thus any stratospheric aerosol cooling effect is 
generally
going to be in the direction of restoring status quo - towards the 8000 
years
stable level, that Peter Read was emailing about, earlier
today.
 
But I'm
not sure that there is going to be much spread of aerosol out of the 
polar
region, if we get the timing and altitude right, so that aerosol acts 
in spring
and summer but is mostly gone by winter.  We want it to mostly go by 
winter
to avoid ozone depletion, but this should also have the effect of 
reducing
drift.  And most of the stratospheric wind is latitudinal (West-East) 
near
the poles, with only a small longitudinal component (mainly towards the
pole).  Furthermore, at the poles the stratospheric air tends to sink
- so the aerosol would tend to drop into the troposphere and get washed 
out
before it could reach the subtropics.
 
However, suppose everything goes as wrong as it can
(a small probability), how many lives might be lost through weak 
monsoons for a
few years?  What would the lasting effect be on India's GDP?  These
figures are what we have to balance a
gainst the pros of geoengineering, 
taking
into account this small probability.
 
Cheers,
 
John
 
 

  ----- Original Message -----
  From:
  Alvia Gaskill

  To: Andrew Lockley
   Cc: John Nissen ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ;
  [email protected]
  ; [email protected]
  ; [email protected] ; [email protected]
  Sent: Sunday, May 10, 2009 2:07 PM
  Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Balancing the pros
  and cons of geoengineering



  Winds in the stratosphere (above 53,000 ft) tend to blow
  from east to west, but periodically reverse.  The links below
  are to simulations of how the Pinatubo eruption gases spread. 
   Release above 90,000 ft is of little value in that the gas will 
simply settle
   back down to that altitude due to the density of the air and as noted 
before,
   release outside the tropics shortens the lifetime of the aerosol, 
although in
   a more complex distribution scheme than the simple ones studied to 
date, it
  might offer some as yet unknown advantages.   Note the misuse
  of the word elevation for altitude.
   
   
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov:80/gsfc/newsroom/tv%20page/G02-016_earth.htm (Click 

  on "Volcanic Plume Movie" at bottom of page to see video.)
   
  ITEM (2): Volcanic Plume Spreads - This com
puter
   model shows the dispersion of the volcanic plume from the Mt. 
Pinatubo
   volcano. The 1991 Pinatubo eruption was sulfur-rich, producing 
volcanic clouds
   that lasted a number of years in the stratosphere. The Pinatubo 
eruption
   widely expanded the area of ozone loss over the Arctic and Antarctic. 
Red
   colors indicate higher elevations and blue colors indicate lower 
elevations
  for the plume.
   
  http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a000000/a000074/
   
  Another animation of the Pinatubo aerosol spread
  generated from satellite imagery.  Appears to cover period of about 3
  months post eruption.
   
   

    ----- Original Message -----
    From:
    Andrew Lockley
    To: Alvia Gaskill
     Cc: John Nissen ; [email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ;
    [email protected]
    ; [email protected]
    ; [email protected] ; [email protected]
    Sent: Saturday, May 09, 2009 9:11
    PM
    Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Balancing the
    pros and cons of geoengineering

A few comments on that:
    1) Droplet size shouldn't affect chemistry.  Both surface area and
     the cross sectional area are proportional to the square of the 
radius.
      Volume affects residence time, and is proportional to the cube of 
the
=2
0    radius.  Big droplets are shorter-lived, and hence more 
controllable,
    but less mass-efficient.
    2) The Brewer Dobson circulation drives aerosol transport and
    predominantly acts towards the poles.  I am not aware of East-West
     winds in the stratosphere (but that's probably because I know sweet 
FA about
    such things, not cos they don't exist)  In the absence of EW
    circulation, what will force aerosols to India?
3) Release into the high
     stratosphere would remove the need to release precursor at the 
equator, as
     lifting from the BDC would not be needed.  What's the peak height 
of
    the balloons?
     4) On a more general point, should we start a 'wish list' of 
research
     papers that need to be done.  Eager young PhD students will 
hopefully
    come along and pick these up for us. Or is that just fantasy?


    A


    2009/5/10 Alvia Gaskill &lt;[email protected]&gt;



      This depends on the objective.  For a global
       aerosol program designed to stop the warming of the entire 
planet, the
       answer is no.  In this case, we want the aerosol to stay 
suspended as
       long as possible to get the maximum amount of sunlight scattering 
and to
       minimize the quantity of precursor that has to be transport
ed to 
the
       stratosphere.  The longer lived aerosol would also tend to be 
less of
       a problem in ozone depletion as the surface area would be reduced 
relative
      to larger shorter lived droplets. 
       
      If the aerosol precursor is released in the tropical
       stratosphere, it will circle and cover the entire globe, 
including
      India.  Releases outside the tropics could be attempted, but this
       would create uneven warming of a different kind and a good 
portion of
      India and all of China is outside the tropics anyway.
       
      In the case of an Arctic only aerosol program, the
       aerosol size issue is probably the same, but the supporters have 
set as
       criteria releasing the precursor in the upper troposphere (around 
45,000
       ft) in the spring with the goal of having it all gone by the end 
of the
       summer.  This would minimize any ozone depletion as the aerosol 
would
      have to be present in the winter for the "dark" reactions to take
       place.  Having the aerosol active only during the summer might 
lessen
       or have no impact on monsoons or other seasonal rainfall 
patterns. 
      There is no data to support this one way or the other.
     
  
      Note also that the limited modeling done to date in
       addition to the resolution of regional impacts issue mentioned 
earlier
       today also has focussed almost entirely on high loading of 
aerosol
       precursor to simulate that required to offset a doubling of CO2 
from
      pre-industrial.  While these extreme conditions may actually be
       required at some point decades from now, a more likely scenario 
is one of
       a gradual incremental increase in the aerosol to match GHG 
forcing or to
      offset loss of tropospheric aerosols.  In such cases, the climate
       system may adjust and there may be no impact on monsoonal flows 
or
       precipitation or the effect may be very gradual and so can be 
dealt with
      by adaptation.  The point is we simply don't know because these
      studies haven't been done.  Thus the risk questions posed by John
      Nissen represent work that needs to be done.




        ----- Original Message -----
        From: Andrew Lockley
        To: John Nissen
         Cc: Alvia Gaskill ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; 
[email protected] ; [email protected] ; [email protected]
        Sent: Satur
day, May 09, 2009 8:01
        PM
        Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Balancing
        the pros and cons of geoengineering

Can't we modify the aerosol size, and deployment
         patterns, to make sure they fall out quickly and don't go 
anywhere near
        India?


        A


        2009/5/9 John Nissen &lt;[email protected]&gt;

        Very
          good discussion.

I'm trying to get a balance of pros (benefits
           B1-B7) and cons (specific fears S1-S21).  What I'd like out 
of
           our discussion is some kind of risk assessment for the 
possible
           downside of a weaker monsoon, as this is considered the 
biggest risk
           in the regional effects (S1).   And we could make this 
reasonably
           pessimistic, to be on the safe side - i.e. be cautious with 
the
           application of geoengineering.  On the other hand, we might 
be
           able to reduce this risk, e.g. by neutralising sulphate 
aerosol; if
           there's a good chance of this working, then we can factor 
that into
           the calculation. Or the risk might be offset by a benefit in 
that
          region, e.g. improved summer water supply from
 Himalayan
          glaciers?

So, what kind of impact would a weaker monsoon (ISM)
           have on India?  What is the probability of stratospheric 
aerosols
           deployed in the Arctic would produce a weaker monsoon?  Can 
this
          risk be significantly countered?  Can it be significantly
          offset?

Note that the risk on benefit side might be measured in
           terms of a risk, without geoengineering, of millions or even 
billions
           of lives being lost (especially if massive methane release 
adds
           several degrees of global warming, B4).  Alternatively we 
could
           measure in GDP lost - current global GDP (aka GWP) is about 
$60
          trillion I believe.

Cheers,

John



-----
           Original Message ----- From: "Alvia Gaskill" 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;
To: &lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;[email protected]&gt;

Cc: &lt;[email protected]&gt;; "Andrew Lockley"
          &lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;[email protected]&gt;;
           &lt;[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;
Sent: Saturday, May 09,
          2009 4:50 PM
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: Balancing the pros and 
cons of
          geoengineering






          Stephen
             makes a good point that leads to a more general one.  If 
there
             are precipitation reductions associated with sunlight 
blocking
             schemes, consideration should also be given to mitigating 
these,
             analogous to the medications given to patients with Type II 
diabetes
            to combat the side effects of the primary drug.

This is an
             oversimplification, but the way summer monsoons work is 
that in the
             summer the land gets warmer than the ocean faster, creating 
a low
             pressure area and this causes on shore flow as air moves 
from high
            to low presssure.  For some reason, Laki caused this to be
             muted.  There were no aerosols from Laki over India and it 
has
             been suggested there was a teleconnected response (see the 
paper
             Stephen attached) although in paleo climate the authors say 
the
             effects were direct, but don't give specifics. In the case 
of
             Pinatubo, both the land and sea were cooled by the aerosol 
and the
     
        land simply didn't heat up fast enough to generate the on 
shore
            flow.

If the Arctic only aerosol geoengineering does cause a
             reduction in the ISM (Indian Summer Monsoon as there are 
other
             monsoons that affect India, but this is the most important 
one), use
             of the cloud whitening to restore at least some of the 
temperature
             differential should be considered. Likewise, in a global 
aerosol
             scheme, with a global aerosol spread similar to that of 
Pinatubo,
             the cloud whitening could also be used to create a 
temperature
             differential, but at some point it becomes a race to the 
bottom,
             with the land temperature simply too cool to initiate the 
low
             pressure area.  In this case, reducing the depth of the 
aerosol
             layer over the land may be the most effective way to 
restore the
            dynamics.

I previously suggested using ammonia released from
             either planes or balloons to react with the sulfate aerosol 
and drop
             them out as ammonium sulfate. This idea as well as 
Stephen's could
          =2
0  be applied to other locations such as the Amazon, Eastern 
China and
            Africa where models indicate unacceptable reductions in
             precipitation are a result of either aerosol geoengineering 
or
            global warming.  Of course, the ammonia wouldn't be of any
            value in a global warming/no aerosol scenario.

I said in one
             the earliest papers I wrote on geoengineering that 
eventually we
             were going to have to learn how to manipulate the climate 
to our
            advantage.  That includes both gross scale and fine
            tuning.

In a related issue, last year I posted a link from a
             group in the UK that was carrying out some 130 different 
models of
            aerosol geoengineering.  It was a volunteer effort among
            universities.  If they have done even a fraction of the
             modeling, this work should be taken into account in 
designing new
            studies such as Rutgers is proposing.  Anyone have an
            update?

You may recall also that we spent some time last year
             discussing the significance of the "little brown blotches" 
in
            
absolute terms and now Ken also raises the issue of their
            resolution.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsoon

Monsoons
             are caused by the larger amplitude of the seasonal cycle of 
land
             temperature compared to that of nearby oceans. This 
differential
             warming happens because heat in the ocean is mixed 
vertically
             through a "mixed layer" that may be fifty meters deep, 
through the
             action of wind and buoyancy-generated turbulence, whereas 
the land
             surface conducts heat slowly, with the seasonal signal 
penetrating
             perhaps a meter or so. Additionally, the specific heat 
capacity of
             liquid water is significantly higher than that of most 
materials
             that make up land. Together, these factors mean that the 
heat
             capacity of the layer participating in the seasonal cycle 
is much
             larger over the oceans than over land, with the consequence 
that the
             air over the land warms faster and reaches a higher 
temperature than
             the air over the ocean.[11] Heating of the air over the 
land reduces
             the air's density, creating an
 area of low pressure. This 
produces a
             wind blowing toward the land, bringing moist near-surface 
air from
             over the ocean. Rainfall is caused by the moist ocean air 
being
             lifted upwards by mountains, surface heating, convergence 
at the
             surface, divergence aloft, or from storm-produced outflows 
at the
             surface. However the lifting occurs, the air cools due to 
expansion,
            which in turn produces condensation.

In winter, the land
             cools off quickly, but the ocean retains heat longer. The 
cold air
             over the land creates a high pressure area which produces a 
breeze
             from land to ocean.[11] Monsoons are similar to sea and 
land
             breezes, a term usually referring to the localized, diurnal 
(daily)
             cycle of circulation near coastlines, but they are much 
larger in
            scale, stronger and seasonal.[12]



----- Original
             Message ----- From: "Stephen Salter" 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;
To: &lt;[email protected]&gt;
Cc: &lt;[email protected]&gt;; "Andrew Lockley"
             &lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;geoen
[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;; &lt;[email protected]&gt;; 
&lt;[email protected]&gt;
Sent: Saturday, May 09, 2009
            6:43 AM
Subject: [geo] Re: Balancing the pros and cons of
            geoengineering



            Hi
              All

The attached paper by Zickfeld et al shows, in figure
              2, what might
happen to the Indian Monsoon if we do nothing.
              Cooling the sea relative
to the land should move things in the
              opposite direction.

Stephen

Emeritus Professor of
              Engineering Design
School of Engineering and
              Electronics
University of Edinburgh
Mayfield
              Road
Edinburgh EH9 3JL
Scotland
tel +44 131 650
              5704
fax +44 131 650 5702
Mobile  07795 203 195
[email protected]
http://www.see.ed.ac.uk/~shs



Alan
              Robock wrote:

              Dear
                Ken,

I agree.  We need several models to do the same
                experiment so we can see
how robust the ModelE results are.
                That is why we have proposed to the
IPCC modeling groups to
     
           all do the same experiments so we can compare
results.
                 Nevertheless, observations after large volcanic
                eruptions,
including 1783 Laki and 1991 Pinatubo, show
                exactly the same precip
reductions as our
                calculations.

Even if precip in the summer monsoon region
                goes down, how important is
it for food production?  It
                will be countered by increased CO2 and
increased diffuse
                solar radiation, both of which should make plants grow
more.
                 We need people studying impacts of climate change on
                agriculture
to take our scenarios and analyze
                them.

Alan

Alan Robock, Professor
                II
 Director, Meteorology Undergraduate
                Program
 Associate Director, Center for Environmental
                Prediction
Department of Environmental Sciences    
                   Phone: +1-732-932-9800 x6222
Rutgers University
                                 
                     
          Fax:
                +1-732-932-8644
14 College Farm Road      
                            E-mail: [email protected]
New Brunswick, NJ
                08901-8551  USA      http://envsci.rutgers.edu/~robock



Ken
                Caldeira wrote:


                A
                  few questions re claims about monsoons:

1. How well is
                  the monsoon represented in the model's base state? Is
this
                  a model whose predictions about the monsoon are to be
                  trusted?

2. Since the believability of climate model
                  results for any small
region based on one model simulation
                  is low, for some reasonably
defined global metrics (e.g.,
                  rms error in temperature and precip,
averaged over land
                  surface, cf. Caldeira and Wood 2008) is the amount
of mean
                  climate change reduced by reasonable aerosol forcing?
                  (I
conjecture yes.)

Alan is interpreting as
               
   significant his little brown blotches in the
right side of
                  Fig 7 in a model with 4 x 5 degree resolution
                  (see
attachment).

How does the GISS ModelE do in the
                  monsoon region? If you look at Fig
9 of Jiandong et al
                  (attached), at least in cloud radiative forcing,
GISS
                   ModelE is one of the worst IPCC AR4 models in the 
monsoon
                  region.

So, while Alan may ultimately be proven right,
                  it is a little
premature to be implying that we know based
                  on Alan's simulations how
these aerosol schemes will affect
                  the Indian monsoon.

If you look at Caldeira and Wood
                  (2008), we find that idealized Arctic
solar reduction plus
                  CO2, on average precipitation is increased
relative to the
                  1xCO2
                  world.


___________________________________________________
Ken
                  Caldeira

Carnegie Institution Dept of Global
                  Ecology
260 Panama Street, Stanford, 
CA 94305 USA

[email protected] &lt;mailto:[email protected]&gt;; 
[email protected]
&lt;mailto:[email protected]&gt;
http://dge.stanford.edu/DGE/CIWDGE/labs/caldeiralab
+1
                  650 704 7212; fax: +1 650 462
                5968





&gt;




--





The University of Edinburgh is a charitable
              body, registered in
Scotland, with registration number
              SC005336.




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