http://news.sciencemag.org/climate/2014/11/what-have-climate-engineering-boffins-learned

What have climate engineering boffins learned?

Eli Kintisch 25 November 2014

Three projects funded by the British government since 2010 to study
thedeliberate tinkering with the planet to counteract climate change, known
as geoengineering, are soon to end. Today scientists presenting at the
Royal Society in London announced some of their findings, took stock of
some of their setbacks and laid out the way forward. “It’s been a roller
coaster, for sure,” volcanologist Matthew Watson of the University of
Bristol told ScienceInsider by telephone after the event. Watson led
theSPICE project, which focused on sun-blocking technologies, like the
oft-discussed spreading of sulfate aerosol particles in the stratosphere.
Among the findings of his effort, he says, were that certain particles,
including titanium dioxide and silicon dioxide, may harm the ozone layer as
much as 100 times less than sulfates. The team also studied materials to
use to build hoses to deliver geoengineering chemicals to high altitudes.
(“At the pressures and temperatures we’re talking about, it turns out
Kevlar would melt,” says Watson.)

A second project, called the Integrated Assessment of Geoengineering
Proposals, assessed a variety of geoengineering techniques including
sun-blocking. Their published work included papers on the challenges facing
approaches to whiten clouds to reflect sunlight, and how linguistic framing
impacts public perception of geoengineering. And a third project,
dubbedClimate Geoengineering Governance, focused on governance, law and
ethics, conducting a series of reports and workshops on the topic.The
scientists who conducted the work say they did more than write papers on
the controversial topic – they forged new bonds between scientists. “We
created a new breed of interdisciplinary researchers,” says climate
scientist Piers Foster of the University of Leeds. He led the integrated
assessment effort, which “bought together climate scientists, social
scientists and control engineers.”

The projects certainly had their share of challenges in the public eye. In
2012, amid public outcry, SPICE scientists had to cancela planned
experiment in which water vapor would be released by balloon 1000 meters
above the ground. A variety of factors, including unexpected environmental
regulations and concerns over intellectual property contributed to the
decision, says Watson. “I can’t explain how difficult it was,” he says. But
Watson says the scientific output of his project made the ordeal worth it,
and he hopes more scientists will build on the research he and his
colleagues have done. “I’m pretty proud of what we’ve accomplished,” he
says.“But there’s certainly lots more work to be done,” he says. The
funding for all three efforts ends in March 2015. Watson lacks new funding
to continue his project, though he says he would apply for more support if
the UK Research Councils, which funded the three projects, were to develop
a regular funding program for geoengineering science. Despite repeated
calls by expert bodies like the National Academies and the Royal Society
for international governments to fund climate engineering, only the UK and
Germany have made longer-term commitments, and the European Union has
supported a major assessment report.

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