Scientists warn geoengineering may disrupt rainfall
9:38am EDT
By Chris Wickham
LONDON (Reuters) - Large-scale engineering projects aimed at fighting global 
warming could radically reduce rainfall in Europe and North America, a team of 
scientists from four European countries have warned.
Geoengineering projects are controversial, even though they are largely 
theoretical at this point. They range from mimicking the effects of large 
volcanic eruptions by releasing sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, to 
deploying giant mirrors in space to deflect the sun's rays.
Proponents say they could be a rapid response to rising global temperatures but 
environmentalists argue they are a distraction from the need to reduce man-made 
carbon emissions.
Critics also point to a lack of solid research into unintended consequences and 
the absence of any international governance structure for such projects, whose 
effects could transcend national borders.
A small geoengineering experiment in the UK was recently abandoned due to a 
dispute over attempts by some of the team involved to patent the technology.
In this new study scientists from Germany, Norway, France and the UK used four 
different computer models that mimic the earth's climate to see how they 
responded to increased levels of carbon dioxide coupled with reduced radiation 
from the sun.
Their scenario assumed a world with four times the carbon dioxide concentration 
of the preindustrial world, which lead author Hauke Schmidt says is at the 
upper 
end, but in the range of what is considered possible at the end of this century.
They found that global rainfall was reduced by about 5 percent on average using 
all four models.
"Climate engineering cannot be seen as a substitute for a policy pathway of 
mitigating climate change through the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions," 
they said in the study, published in Earth System Dynamics, an open access 
journal of the European Geosciences Union.
Under the scenario studied, rainfall diminished by about 15 percent, or about 
100 millimeters per year, compared to pre-industrial levels, in large areas of 
North America and northern Eurasia.
Over central South America, all the models showed a decrease in rainfall that 
reached more than 20 percent in parts of the Amazon region.

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