http://thebulletin.org/not-enough-time-geoengineering-work7963

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
ANALYSIS
02/02/2015 - 12:26

Not enough time for geoengineering to work?

Piers Forster

PIERS FORSTER

Piers Forster is a professor of physical climate change at the School of
Earth and Environment at the University of Leeds

There is consensus among scientists and global leaders on what has to
happen to arrest climate change: The latest Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change report, endorsed by 120 country delegations in November
2014, says that without an immediate and large reduction in carbon dioxide
emissions, global temperatures will sail into dangerous territory within
the next 30 years, triggering effects such as major sea-level rise and
increases in heavy rainfall.

Despite being in accord, though, when the same country delegations met for
UN climate negotiations in Lima in December, they couldn’t reach agreement
on what to do. This lack of action on mitigating emissions, despite what we
know, is making more people look towards geoengineering—large-scale,
technology-driven ideas that seek to either remove (or “capture”) massive
amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere or reduce the amount of solar
radiation absorbed by the Earth.

It’s a tempting solution. Climate change is like a steam train heading
towards a ravine where the bridge is out. The train is speeding up as we
add more and more coal to the fire. Reducing the amount of coal being added
will take a long time to slow the train, just as, even if humans were to
start heavily mitigating carbon dioxide emissions, it would take centuries
for atmospheric levels to begin to come down. Using the train analogy,
geoengineering could provide faster solutions: carbon capture would remove
burning coals from under the boiler, and solar techniques would slam on the
brakes.

So could geoengineering be a quick fix? We have been researching the
feasibility of such technologies as part of Britain’s Integrated Assessment
of Geoengineering Proposals project, which spans engineering and the
physical and social sciences. We examined two carbon capture technologies
and six solar technologies in as much detail as possible, and identified
two main stumbling blocks. The first issue has to do with the deployment
time necessary to introduce a technology at scale, and the second with how
long we would need to commit to geoengineering to make a difference.

Rocky rollouts. None of the proposed technologies really exist on anything
other than paper. This raises serious concerns as to whether any of them
could be developed and deployed at scale within the next few decades. We
investigated one technology first proposed around 15 years ago in which
sea-salt particles would be sprayed into clouds from ocean-going ships to
increase the low clouds’ reflectivity. We chose this technique as a test
case because some of the proposed engineering details are in the public
domain, so we could use them to improve the realism of our simulations.Our
simulations found three issues that reduced the efficacy of the spraying
mechanism: only certain clouds were susceptible to spraying at certain
times of day; many of the sea-salt particles coagulated and rained out
before they reached the cloud; and the particle plume generated by the
moving ship had a tendency to sink rather than rise to cloud level (due to
the evaporation of water from the generation of sea-salt). No doubt many of
these obstacles would be surmountable, but development and testing take
time.

International governance and legal obstacles will also slow any attempts at
implementation. Even a carbon-capture technology like tree planting, which
already exists and is benign on a small scale, becomes problematic when
deployed on a large scale, requiring that competition for land and
resources be taken into account. And all of the solar technologies we
simulated led to side effects, particularly in the form of changing
rainfall patterns. The side effects were uncertain, crossed national
borders, and often occurred on the other side of the Earth from the
deployment location. The possibility of a rogue state conducting unilateral
geoengineering aside, people and governments would have to develop
international legal protocols to manage the process of deployment before
any technologies could be put in place.

Watching and waiting. We also found that with current observation
capabilities and the inherent variability of the climate system, it would
take at least a decade of careful observations to determine the impact and
side effects of geoengineering. Climate is defined as the “average
weather.” Floods and droughts happen even without any manmade interference,
so weather needs to be averaged over at least a decade to determine the
climate. A similar 10-year average would be needed to see what effect
geoengineering was having on weather statistics.

There would be further complications. The effectiveness of geoengineering
deployment could be affected by the weather. For example, we studied
injecting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight before
it hits the Earth. But the winds in the stratosphere may blow differently
than expected and produce abnormal distributions of sulphate aerosol in the
stratosphere. Similarly, the technology that would have ships injecting
sea-salt particles into the air to brighten marine clouds would need a
strategy to cope with varying patterns of cloudiness. Careful collection of
statistics to measure the effects these technologies were having on
climate, and their effectiveness, would require time. Unfortunately, time
may not be on the side of the would-be geoengineers: Imagine that soon
after injecting particles into the stratosphere, a country experienced
unprecedented flooding. The engineers would be unable to say whether the
technology was to blame or not. This uncertainty could easily lead to
paranoia as to what effects geoengineering was having, even if it was
blameless.

It is hard to predict how much geoengineering could cool the climate over a
given time frame due to a lack of sufficient information on the proposed
technologies. However, we were able to roughly gauge the maximum potential
of several radiation management technologies. We found that marine cloud
brightening and cirrus cloud thinning may not be able to cool the planet by
much more than 1 degree Celsius globally. A slightly greater cooling may be
achieved by injecting sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere. Other schemes
we investigated had very large local effects on either temperature or
rainfall, making them less attractive as global cooling mechanisms.
Moreover, any possible cooling needs to be put in context with the expected
1 degree Celsius of additional warming over the next 20 to 30 years from
continued emissions of greenhouse gases. Unless we reduce greenhouse gases
in the atmosphere, rising temperatures could at best only be delayed for a
short while.  We need to remember, too, that even if geoengineering
appeared to be effective in all the ways we hoped, it wouldn’t be possible
to simply switch it off. For it to continue to be effective in a world of
rising emissions, the scale of its deployment would need to grow
commensurately. Suddenly stopping would then become a problem, as very
rapid warming would result.  Rapid warming is damaging to many biological
ecosystems which do not have time to adapt. By setting off down the
geoengineering path, we would be committing future generations to the
technology.Just as slamming on the brakes can slow down a train headed for
a ravine, geoengineering can cool the climate. But it won’t happen without
a lot of bruising, and it’s not a quick fix. Any hero worth his or her salt
should try to stop the train falling into the ravine by every means
possible, but we need to design, build and fit the braking system first. We
therefore need to continue to urgently research these technologies.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to