Poster's note : I don't normally share press releases, but this is a
complex and important paper that merits explanation

http://www.cscs.ch/publications/highlights/2016/can_cirrus_cloud_seeding_help_to_save_the_climate/index.html

Can cirrus cloud seeding help to “save” the climate?

Researchers at ETH Zurich used ‘Piz Daint’ to simulate how cirrus cloud
seeding, a novel geoengineering method, might impact the Earth’s radiation
balance. Their findings are sobering.

July 4, 2016 - by Simone Ulmer

Cirrus clouds look like giant feathers wandering around the blue sky; In
fact, they consist of numerous tiny ice crystals. They form in our
latitudes at heights of 5-13 km, where temperatures can be as low as -70°C.
Although they may seem light as a feather and translucent, these clouds
contribute to the greenhouse warming effect of Earth's atmosphere. This is
because incoming short-wave solar radiation easily passes through the thin
cirrus clouds, while they block a large fraction of outgoing long-wave
terrestrial radiation.

The interaction of cirrus clouds with radiation is a complex one, which
depends on the concentration of ice crystals, their size, as well as on
properties such as the temperature of the cloud and the underlying surface,
and solar insolation.  Model calculations indicate their radiative effect
accounts for about 5 Watts per square meter in global average. “Were one to
eliminate all cirrus clouds, that would immediately counteract a CO2
doubling which adds a ‘warming’ impact of 3.7 Watts per square meter”, says
atmospheric physicist Ulrike Lohmann of ETH Zurich. This is what makes
cirrus clouds a potential target for geoengineering methods.

Geoengineering by means of larger ice crystals

An ideal geoengineering scheme would dissolve the cirrus clouds completely
or prevent their formation in the first place. This, however, is not
possible. Nevertheless, their radiative effects could be reduced by seeding
them with some very effective ice nucleating particles. These ice
nucleating particles are thought to decrease the number of ice crystals in
the cirrus cloud and make the remaining ones larger. This would allow more
long-wave radiation to escape to space, decreasing their warming impact on
climate. The effectiveness of such measures has now been investigated by
Lohmann and her graduate student Blaž Gasparini using simulations with the
ECHAM6-HAM global climate model on the CSCS supercomputer ‘Piz Daint’.

A key issue that needs to be addressed to understand the efficacy of
geoengineering, says Gasparini, is whether a cirrus cloud and its ice
crystals have formed heterogeneously or homogeneously. Heterogeneously
formed ice crystals develop on a solid particle, called an ice nucleating
particle, such as a grain of dust. On the other hand, water droplets or
sulphuric acid droplets lead to homogeneously formed cirrus clouds. Only
these homogeneously formed cirrus clouds can be effectively influenced by
artificial ice nucleating particles, ideally at locations where the
humidity is relatively high and the cirrus clouds are still in the process
of formation.

To date there exists only three studies on this topic, says Lohmann. These
offer some hope that the radiation effect induced by cirrus clouds could be
cut by 2 watts per square metre – which is to say, up to 40 percent of
their estimated overall effect. However, the simulations by Gasparini and
Lohmann on the CSCS supercomputer ‘Piz Daint’ paint a less optimistic
picture. Their simulations show that only a small fraction of cirrus clouds
has been formed homogeneously and is therefore susceptible to artificial
seeding. Furthermore, it was found that more cirrus clouds formed under the
influence of artificial ice nucleating particles and, rather than
increasing, the diameter of their ice crystals actually decreased. Their
conclusions show no significant effects of cirrus cloud seeding on climate.

More data needed

Gasparini and Lohmann note that their model predicts more heterogeneously
formed cirrus clouds, and also a larger radiative warming effect from
remnants of thunderstorm clouds, compared to previous studies. These
so-called anvil cirrus clouds, say the researchers, have similar radiative
effects to locally-formed cirrus clouds but cannot be influenced by
introduction of artificial ice nucleating particles in these altitudes. Due
to the lack of studies as well as the uncertain data available on the
global distribution of cirrus clouds, Lohmann admits that the results
currently obtained in this area are contradictory and will remain so for
the time being. The researchers advocate for better observational data of
the properties of cirrus clouds and ice crystal formation mechanisms to
improve their computer models and strengthen the results of their modelling.

Reference
Gasparini B, and Lohmann U: Why cirrus cloud seeding cannot substantially
cool the planet, J. Geophys. Res. Atmos. (2016), 121,
doi:10.1002/2015JD024666.

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