http://www.spp-climate-engineering.de/symposium-blog-single/items/day-1-could-we.html

Day 1 - Could we?
07.07.2015 22:42 (comments: 0)
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Day 1: Tuesday July 7, 2015 - Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and
Humanities

Although many hold high hopes for the next international climate conference
in Paris this winter (COP 15), evidence suggests that environmental,
technological, economic and social inertia will prevent the world's major
polluters from reducing carbon dioxide emissions fast enough to prevent
dangerous climate change. This has led to the increased consideration of a
range of Climate Engineering (CE) technologies, which can be grouped into
two main categories; Carbon Dioxide Removal (CDR) methods, which aim to
reduce the levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere, allowing
outgoing long-wave heat radiation to escape more easily, and Solar
Radiation Management (SRM) methods, which aim to reduce the net incoming
short-wave solar radiation and thus warmth reaching the Earth. While SRM
technologies may be able to reduce the risks associated with rapid climate
change, they do not represent an alternative to carbon management. As Klaus
Lackner outlined in today's introductory lecture, the inherent inertia of
the global carbon system means that stabilizing emissions  to meet the 2
degree target outlined by the IPCC requires not only the reduction of
global net emissions to zero, but also implies the need for negative
emissions. Therefore, as the symposium's opening presentation emphasized, a
deeper understanding of the feasibility of both CDR and SRM technologies is
needed as soon as possible.
This week's symposium aims to deal with a wide spectrum of Climate
Engineering related questions, but today's session focused on what is
arguably one of the most fundamental of them all: Could we do it? [1]
Entitled "Scientific Feasibility of Climate Engineering Ideas," the first
session of the week included talks by seven natural scientists and
engineers who addressed the "Could we?" question from different
perspectives.
We were updated on a plurality of practical CE puzzles being addressed
around the world. First, Jon Egill Kristjansson told us about the fine line
a potential cloud seeder would have to walk by seeding small, homogenous
ice nuclei in cirrus clouds, which then cool the planet by letting more
long-wave radiation out, but making sure not to "over-seed", as injecting
too many nuclei would mean reduced solar reflection and subsequently more
warming. We heard that although initial modeling on cirrus cloud "thinning"
in this manner indicates that the method is scientifically feasible, as one
member of the audience pointed out, very little is known about its
technical feasibility. The creation of small, homogenous ice nuclei in
cirrus clouds could cool the planet, but a multitude of questions remain
regarding how, where and under what conditions such particles can be
successfully created.
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The second speaker, Rolf Müller, filled us in on how little is currently
known about the way in which injecting sulphates into the stratosphere may
affect the ozone layer. He went on to emphasize that future models need to
look at the sensitivity of chlorine particles and moisture when assessing
the effects of sulphur-based Solar Radiation Management (SRM) techniques.
In a related talk on the technical complications associated with getting
sulphur particles up into the stratosphere some 20 km above our heads, Hugh
Hunt explained that delivering 10 million tonnes of particles a year using
aircraft would roughly double today's global aviation traffic, requiring
approximately 30,000 flights per day. A potentially much less expensive
(and considerably quieter) alternative involving only 10 tethered balloons
with hoses attached, delivering a steady flow of particles at a rate of 300
kg per second would seem a much simpler option. But then we heard about the
troubles the wind poses for this type of delivery system, the fact that a
tether strong enough hold an enormous balloon 20 km above the Earth's
surface for an indefinite period does not yet exist, and the fear that CO2
pumped up such a long hose would need to be under such high pressure that
it would solidify rather than "flow steadily" as originally envisioned.
Other open questions raised in the subsequent discussion included the
suitable framing of future tests; potential incompatibility between the
scientifically optimal location for the launch of such balloons and the
technical practicalities involved (weather conditions, population, flight
paths etc); and the concern that successful initial testing may lead to the
method becoming increasingly "politically tempting."
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Coming down from the heavens, Lena Boysen followed with her talk focused on
the potentials of terrestrial CO2 sequestration using biomass plantations.
Although these sequestration alternatives are often considered attractive
and "green," today we heard that they are likely to have a multitude of
side-effects on the water cycle, food production, biodiversity and the
planet's albedo. Additionally, modeling results suggest that even dramatic
shifts in land use would not remove enough carbon from the atmosphere to
reduce warming significantly: Even simulated so-called 100% replacement
scenarios in which all agricultural land was replaced with biomass
plantations did not result in a dramatic reduction in warming within the
model parameters. Greening the planet may be desirable for a variety of
reasons, but this presentation suggested afforestation alone will not be
enough to reduce warming significantly.
The final two presentations on this warm Tuesday in Berlin [2] focused on
olivine accelerated weathering, with Peter Köhler looking at ocean
fertilization and Thorben Amann discussing the effects of element release
as a consequence of land-based weathering. A simulated CO2 removal
experiment on the role of iron during olivine dissolution in the open ocean
showed that the size of the olivine grains played a huge role in the
effective dissolution: Too large and they sink, too light and they remain
in the surface layers. Questions were raised by members of the audience
about how the grains of the optimal size would be sourced - would naturally
ground small particles be transported from beaches, or would larger
particles be ground, and how would the energy use of the two options
compare? The land-based use of ground rock particles poses different
problems - during the final presentation of the day, Thorben Amann
indicated that although the particles can release fertilizing nutrients
which could be beneficial to agriculture, the rock types with most enhanced
weathering carbon capture potential also contain trace heavy metals. The
use of this method would therefore boil down to a trade-off between
fertilising potential, trace metal release level and CO2 capture potential.
After a long, interesting day of talks, we found ourselves trickling out of
the conference hall with even more questions to ponder. Today's speakers
showed us that before an answer to the deceptively simple query posed at
the start of this post can be found, a multitude of much more complex
questions remain to be answered

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