http://www.mercurynews.com/science/ci_28470304/climate-change-controversial-cloud-brightening-project-proposed-moss

San Jose Mercury News

Climate change: Controversial 'cloud brightening' project proposed for Moss
Landing

By Lisa M. Krieger [email protected]

Sunday, July 12, 2015 - 1:15 a.m.

Aqua Metrology Systems' Armand Neukermans, 73, poses for a portrait behind
a cloud condensation nuclei spraying system prototype at Aqua Metrology
Systems in Sunnyvale, Calif., on Wednesday, June 24, 2015. (LiPo Ching)
SUNNYVALE -- A team of elder Silicon Valley scientists is building an
audacious device that might solve one of humanity's most profound dilemmas
-- a "cloud whitener" designed to cool a warming planet.

The men -- retired physicists, engineers, chemists and computer experts
from some of Silicon Valley's top tech companies -- have been meeting four
days a week for seven years in the Sunnyvale lab of the Marine Cloud
Brightening Project to design a tool that creates perfectly suspended
droplets of water resembling fog.

Their goal is to launch the nation's first open-air field trial of
controversial "geoengineering" at a still-unidentified site in Moss
Landing. There, they would test the ability of an energy-efficient machine
to hurl tiny seawater droplets into a graceful trajectory -- the first step
of a research project to boost the brightness of clouds to reflect rays of
sunlight back into space.

"We are interested in an insurance policy for global warming," said Jack
Foster, 79, a physicist and laser pioneer. "We are not interested in
deploying it unless it's necessary. But we'd like to have something
available, so we know what works and what doesn't work."

The effort to conduct even a small-scale test -- overseen by the University
of Washington, which has numerous experts in atmospheric science --
represents a dramatic shift in thinking in the scientific community, which
until recently resisted conversations about deliberate manipulation of the
climate.

The reason for the change: There is scientific consensus that even if the
world succeeds in shifting away from fossil fuels, warming of the planet is
inevitable -- and it may have catastrophic consequences.

Critics of geoengineering, however, warn against altering nature's
patterns, arguing that we don't yet understand all the potential
ramifications. And they worry that if people see a quick fix for climate
change, they may not try as hard to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"Personally, I doubt that the world is ready for this," said Stephen
Gardiner, a University of Washington philosophy professor who studies the
ethics of environmental policies. "Geoengineering raises huge ethical and
political questions, nationally and internationally."

But the Silicon Valley scientists say the world might not have a choice.
"We need to research the technology," said project leader Armand
Neukermans, 74, whose achievements include the development of the earliest
ink jet printers and who led teams at Xerox Labs, Hewlett-Packard, Tencor
and Xros.

None of the men will be alive by the end of this century, when the
concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is expected to be double
what it is now -- and temperatures are likely to be so high they will harm
ecosystems and human health and welfare.

"But all of us have children or grandchildren," Neukermans said. "We've got
to preserve the future."

The group favors an approach that wafts tiny aerosolized water droplets
into the atmosphere, creating a natural mirror that increases clouds'
reflectivity.

The cloud-brightening concept was first proposed in 1990 by British
physicist John Latham, who published an article in the journal Nature
called "Control of global warming?" And in February, the prestigious
National Academy of Sciences said the concept deserved greater research.

But no one has ever tried to deliberately brighten a cloud.

Lab and computer studies "can only tell us so much about the potential
viability of some proposed climate-intervention technologies," said Michael
Thompson of American University's Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment.

The project seemed like a worthy challenge for longtime friends who'd
rather invent things than play golf.

After it was conceived at a 2006 meeting between Latham and top atmospheric
scientists, the team began a feasibility study with Neukermans' leadership
and $300,000 from the Bill Gates-supported Fund for Innovative Climate and
Energy Research.

"Here in Silicon Valley you can always find unusual guys that have done
weird things," joked Neukermans, a Belgium native with more than 75 patents
to his name. His optical switch company Xros was bought in 2000 by Nortel
Networks for $3.25 billion in stock.

"No one gets paid here," he said. "We just show up."

The team -- whose members range in age from 60 to 79 -- includes
pharmaceutical chemist Gary Cooper; Suds Jain, formerly with Broadcom; Bob
Ormond, with Aqua Metrology Systems; physicist Foster, who helped create
the first supermarket checkout scanners and was formerly with Sandia
National Labs, Sylvania, Hewlett-Packard and Tencor; and instrument
designer Lee Galbraith, formerly with Tencor and Sandia. He is famed for
inventing a way to find flaws on semiconductor wafers.

"They are some of the most extraordinary people in their fields," said the
group's executive director, Kelly Wanser, CEO of Luminus Networks. "They're
from Silicon Valley's previous era of innovation -- a very special group."

They discovered that while there's plenty of experience in cloud watching
-- scientists are monitoring the impact of particles emitted by copper
smelters and slash-and-burn farmers -- there's little research into the
physical processes behind cloud formation.

"Clouds have one of the biggest impacts on global temperature. But they're
one of the most poorly understood parts of the atmospheric system," Wanser
said. "There's never been a way to do a controlled study of aerosols and
clouds. Their interaction is a big mystery."

But the questions raised "are not just scientific questions," noted
American University's Thompson. "There are complex political questions. ...
We are interested in what this process begins -- the 'what's next' of this
process."

The National Weather Service's Warren Blier, a science officer based in
Monterey, noted that "this sort of thing already happens inadvertently all
the time. When large cargo ships go across the ocean, releasing lots of
little particles, we can trace their tracks in offshore marine stratum."

But, he added, if the technology moves from small-scale trials into a
larger environmental experiment, "then all sorts of questions arise," such
as whether precipitation patterns could potentially be altered.

By all indications, the scientists seem to be on the verge of building a
successful cloud whitener.

For instrumentation, "we've had to beg, borrow and steal," joked Cooper.

Some tools come from the University of Washington, others from NASA Ames
and Stanford. A lot come from their own garages.

"We couldn't do what we're doing, if not in the heart of Silicon Valley,"
Cooper said. "Everything we need is next door, or we know somebody who has
it."

Through painstaking trial and error, the scientists are designing and
building a nozzle that emits particles that are small enough to rise and
remain suspended in air -- 0.2 to 0.3 micrometers, about one-tenth the size
of the period at the end of this sentence. The nozzle's holes are so narrow
that they fit only two strands of human hair.

In one early effort, tiny nozzle holes got clogged. Another was more
successful, but required too much energy and was corrosive.

"It looks like a snowblower, but it doesn't act like a snowblower,"
Neukermans said.

To be aerosolized, the particles must be 1,000 times smaller than those
created by snowblowers.

"If you go to the coast, you see a little haze hanging over rocks. We want
that sort of thing," Neukermans said. "You can't see fog, but it seems
foggy."

Funding, not science, could prove to be the group's biggest challenge.
Because geoengineering straddles the fields of physics, atmospheric science
and engineering, it's not eligible for traditional government grants, the
group says.

The next phase of the project is a small, land-based "proof of concept"
experiment in Moss Landing, planned for next year. It would cost about $6
million.

Phase Three -- conducted out at sea, with blowers mounted on a small ship,
propelling droplets that reach real clouds -- is scheduled for 2018 or 2019
and would cost about $10 million.

The technology could be used for creating fog to cool stressed redwood
forests or overheated coral reefs, the team says. But the day may come,
according to the National Academy of Sciences, when more global strategies
might be explored.

That could entail injecting droplets more than 10 miles into stratosphere,
a far more ambitious and controversial endeavor.

The scientists say there will be deep satisfaction if their project
succeeds, but far better would be a future without global warming.

"We would be perfectly happy," Cooper said, "if our method works
beautifully -- and it never needs to be used."

Contact Lisa M. Krieger at 650-492-4098. Follow her at Twitter.com/Lisa M.
Krieger.

Marine Cloud Brightening Project
To learn more, volunteer or contribute, go to http://mcbproject.org/

The 'cloud brightening' team

PrincipalsThomas Ackerman, principal investigatorDepartment of Atmospheric
Sciences, University of WashingtonRobert Wood, principal
investigatorProfessor of Atmospheric Sciences, University of
WashingtonPhilip J. Rasch, principal investigatorPacific Northwest National
LaboratoryArmand Neukermans, project leaderFormerly of Xerox Labs,
Hewlett-Packard, Tencor and XrosKelly Wanser, principal director CEO of
Stateless NetworksEngineersGary Cooper, formerly of Syntex and Roche Jack
Foster, formerly of Sandia, Sylvania, HP and XrosLee Galbraith, formerly of
Sandia and Tencor Suds Jain, formerly of Synoptics, Bay Networks, Broadcom
and Acterra Bob Ormond, of Aqua Metrology Systems

-- 
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