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Your questions answered: geoengineering

25 July 2014 | By Stephen Harris

Our expert panel discusses the feasibility of using geoengineering
techniques to counteract climate change

The world’s slow progress in cutting carbon-dioxide emissions has led some
to call for research into ways we might counteract the effects of man-made
climate change. Such attempts to geoengineer our climate range include
planting trees to absorb CO2; pumping sulphate aerosols into the
atmosphere; and building giant orbiting space mirrors to reflect heat back
into space.

We put your questions on these proposals for geoengineering to a panel of
experts:

Stephen Salter, emeritus professor of engineering design at the University
of Edinburgh, who has designed a system for pumping seawater into the air
to create artificial clouds;

Prof Richard Darton, Oxford University, professor of engineering science
and co-director of the geoengineering programme at the University of
Oxford; , assistant professor of meteorology at the University of Reading;
and Angus Ferraro, University of Exeter, whose research has raised
questions about the unintended and potentially dangerous consequences of
geoengineering.

Richard Darton: Geoengineering comes in two main flavours: a variety of
schemes known as Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR), in which the most prevalent
greenhouse gas is taken out of the atmosphere into safe storage; and Solar
Radiation Management (SRM), which reflects sunshine back into space, to
avoid it heating the Earth’s surface.

Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR)  would be needed at massive scale in order to
have any effect and this would take many decades

CDR would be needed at massive scale in order to have any effect and this
would take many decades. It would be technically easy to turn down or off
if needed, but once the industry was up and running there would be a huge
investment of capital at risk if it were prevented from operating. CDR
would also act to reduce ocean acidification.

SRM, on the other hand, is said to be quick-acting: global temperatures
might reduce noticeably within a few months of deployment (such a cooling
has been observed following volcanic eruptions that altered the radiation
budget in a similar way). However, the commitment to SRM would involve
complex logistics, let alone political agreement, and this would take
several years to put in place.

Stephen Salter: Every geoengineer agrees that reducing CO2 and
CH4 [methane] emissions would be the ideal technique except for the
present, well-demonstrated con of the political impossibility of achieving
it. Absorbing existing and new CO2 from the atmosphere has a strong pro and
would be the next best except for the con that the atmosphere weighs more
than five times 1,018kg. It will take a big effort to move even a fraction
of this through any chemical plant. We should be able to encourage
biological absorption with biochar and also accelerate geological reactions
with materials such as olivine but this looks slow and rather expensive.
Absorbing CO2 from point source releases such as power stations [with
carbon capture and storage] does not look impossibly expensive and would at
least slow the rate at which the problem is increasing.

There are three quite different ways to reduce the solar input: mirrors in
space; sulphur in the stratosphere; and marine cloud brightening
[increasing cloud density by spraying seawater into the atmosphere]. The
cons of the space method are a very high cost, energy and noise, the
reluctance to turn an expensive investment off and the attraction of the
related technology for military weapons. A pro for stratospheric sulphur is
that it would be very much cheaper than mirrors in space. A minor con for
stratospheric sulphur is acid rain but the amounts required are well below
present acidic emissions from coal burning.

SS: The challenges for injecting stratospheric sulphur are the modification
of flight-refuelling aircraft for carrying acidic material, the design of
hoses that can be lifted by balloons but not damaged by wind, or perhaps
other methods such as shells fired from ground and the common problem of
control of aerosol size. The challenges for marine cloud brightening are
the design of an energy-efficient method for spray production and the
generation of sufficient energy in mid-ocean.

RD: SRM schemes involving mirrors in space seem far-fetched at present —
they obviously require solution of some severe design and operational
challenges. The challenge for CDR schemes is to reduce their cost and
improve their effectiveness, so that the large scale of deployment becomes
less burdensome. It is hard to imagine a scenario in which CDR is applied
without at the same time instituting a far more severe control of
CO2 emissions, so we ought also to see carbon capture and storage, energy
efficiency and renewables as part of the CDR deployment mix.

RD: Not really. Considering the potential importance of geoengineering,
relatively little research is being done at present. Most publicly funded
research concentrates on climate modelling and issues of governance and
public acceptability. These issues are extremely important, of course, but
it means that policy development is taking place in a fantasy world: the
engineering challenges that address the key issues of practicality and
deployability are mostly receiving little attention.

SS: The hardware design for marine cloud brightening has gone through a
series of stages with steadily decreasing imperfections. The present design
uses the new technique of digital hydraulics, originally intended for
applications in renewable energy, and on micro lithography as used in the
semi-conductor industry.

Andrew Charlton-Perez: Observations of major volcanic eruptions suggest
that stratospheric aerosols have a lifetime of one to two years. This
implies a long-term commitment to maintain the enhanced stratospheric
aerosol amounts. Should this commitment be terminated abruptly, this could
lead to very rapid climate change that would likely be extremely difficult
for society to adapt to. Geoengineering by brightening marine clouds is
potentially easier to control than adding aerosol to the stratosphere,
which has a significant lag between action and climate effect.

I would strongly oppose the deliberate use of any ‘permanent’ technique:
the next Ice Age is overdue.

Prof Stephen Salter

 The nuclei from marine cloud brightening are washed out by rain and
drizzle so the lifetime varies. The best estimate is ‘a few days’. By
computer superposition of satellite images of clouds downwind it is
possible to measure the cooling and its duration from a single spray
vessel. The CO2-removal methods might take 100 years to take a useful
effect but this would last until a decision to resume emissions. I would
strongly oppose the deliberate use of any ‘permanent’ technique: the next
Ice Age is overdue.

ACP: Obviously, changing the properties of clouds tends to have large local
impact. For stratospheric aerosol geoengineering, responses are less
localised, but are also non-uniform across the globe: there would generally
be cooling in the tropics and some warming in the polar regions compared to
pre-industrial temperatures. In comparison, climate change is expected to
lead to warming at all latitudes with much larger warming in the Arctic.
Given that climate variability operates on large spatial scales bigger than
most countries and our ability to predict and understand this variability
is limited, it is extremely unlikely that individual countries would be
able to adjust their climates independently.

It is extremely unlikely that individual countries would be able to adjust
their climates independently

Andrew Charlton Perez

RD: All geoengineering schemes would affect every person on the planet, one
way or another, so it is absolutely vital that an international framework
be developed through which nations and regions can reach consensus and
agreement. It might indeed be possible, technically, for a large country to
adjust its own climate using SRM, but this would certainly affect its
neighbours (and perhaps the whole planet). CDR would tend to limit the
global mean temperature rise for everyone, but some CDR schemes, for
example, those involving planting huge areas with new crops, could have a
local effect on the climate.

RD: At present we know of no way to ‘tailor our intervention’ so as to
avoid such unintended impacts — Earth systems are simply too interconnected.

SS: Marine cloud brightening should allow a considerable degree of
tailoring if we can learn where and when it should be done. Reducing
sea-surface temperatures above 26.5˚C along the hurricane breeding paths
would reduce the probability and severity of hurricanes and typhoons.
Models show the puzzling result that spray off Namibia will reduce
precipitation over the Amazon basin but also the even more puzzling result
that this can be opposed by spray near the Aleutian Islands [in the
northern Pacific].



ACP: A sophisticated climate monitoring system, most likely more complex
than the one that exists at present, would be needed to monitor the impacts
on climate of any intervention that was made. Deciding how much cooling
would be required goes beyond what climate scientists could comment on,
involving political and moral consideration. For some of the techniques
there are also technical limitations to the amount of cooling that could be
achieved. For example, if aerosol precursors were injected very rapidly
into the stratosphere at some point the resulting aerosol particles would
become very large and fall out into the troposphere, thereby providing an
upper limit to how much the aerosol amount could be increased.

ACP: Studies with climate models suggest that, in addition to changing
surface temperature, many other aspects of the Earth system would also be
affected by an artificially enhanced stratospheric aerosol layer. These
include changes to the hydrological cycle, sea ice, stratospheric ozone and
the productivity of the biosphere. The most significant negative side
effect is probably the reduction in precipitation in the tropics, with
particularly significant reductions in tropical regions with a monsoon
climate such as east Asia and southern Africa. Confidence in what these
likely side effects might be has been increased by more comprehensive
climate model studies in recent years, but quantifying the size of
potential side effects remains very challenging given the imperfect nature
of climate models and limits to our understanding of the climate system and
hydrological cycle. As with other aspects of the climate system, the
possibility of experiencing side effects that haven’t previously been
anticipated or quantified is also quite high.

We should remember that continuing to burn ever-larger amounts of fossil
fuel is already causing ‘side effects

Richard Darton

 We cannot be as confident as I would like but there is a chance that there
could also be positive side effects. Marine cloud brightening makes for
less rainfall over the sea to leave more to fall on land. It is therefore
wrong to use figures for worldwide precipitation changes if the main
reductions are over the sea. An interesting study by Indian climate experts
shows that marine cloud brightening would produce a very small reduction of
precipitation over the Indian subcontinent, which is more than offset by a
reduction of evaporation on land and so give higher river run-off.

RD: We should remember that continuing to burn ever-larger amounts of
fossil fuel is already causing ‘side effects’. The results are visible in
many ways: changing weather patterns, the spread of diseases, growing
stress on water resources and so on.

There are various specific side effects of geoengineering. For example, CDR
involving the growth of biomass for energy with carbon capture and storage
would mean very large-scale land-use change and competition for land
between energy crops, food crops and wild countryside. Side effects could
be food scarcity, ecosystem impoverishment and habitat destruction,
displacement of populations and social disruption. CDR by chemical
processes will have great opportunity costs as productive industrial and
financial capacity is diverted to building and operating chemical plant in
a new, huge industry — purifying the atmosphere.

SS: Progress on purpose-designed hardware is very slow and is dwarfed by a
vast multinational effort on ethics and politics of governance. While there
are many computer studies that could be called experiments, I know of only
four intentional, real-world, open-air ones. Progress on hardware
technology would be greatly accelerated with a small fraction of the money
being spent now on international climate conferences but I do not see this
happening until we have suffered a great deal more from climate change.
With efficient project management the first experiments for marine cloud
brightening could take place from land-based plant on the Faroe and
Aleutian islands 18 months after funding was available.

RD: Most geoengineering schemes are at a low level of technology readiness.
What has been lacking is serious engineering evaluation of whole deployment
scenarios, to check the whole-life costs and impacts, including side
effects. However in North America there are several groups working towards
commercialisation of CDR using chemical and physical sorbents. An important
question is that of funding since, at present, with a low carbon price, it
is hard to understand how commercialisation will be rewarded. Technically,
we could expect to see geoengineering tests of CDR and SRM at a moderate
scale within the next five years, but whether public and international
political acceptance and the commercial underpinning will be agreed in that
time is doubtful

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