US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/mar/24/us-scientists-launch-worlds-biggest-solar-geoengineering-study?CMP=Share_AndroidApp_Gmail

US scientists launch world's biggest solar geoengineering study

Research programme will send aerosol injections into the earth’s upper
atmosphere to study the risks and benefits of a future solar tech-fix for
climate change
[image: The sun from space]


Scientists say the planet could be covered with a solar shield for as
little as $10bn a year. Photograph: ISS/Nasa
Arthur Neslen

Published:12:39 GMT+00:00 Fri 24 March 2017
 Follow Arthur Neslen

US scientists are set to send aerosol injections 20km up into the earth’s
stratosphere in the world’s biggest solar geoengineering programme to date,
to study the potential of a future tech-fix for global warming.

The $20m (£16m) Harvard University project will launch within weeks and
aims to establish whether the technology can safely simulate the
atmospheric cooling effects of a volcanic eruption, if a last ditch bid to
halt climate change is one day needed.
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Scientists hope to complete two small-scale dispersals of first water and
then calcium carbonate particles by 2022. Future tests could involve
seeding the sky with aluminium oxide – or even diamonds.

Is geoengineering a bad idea? | Karl Mathiesen

“This is not the first or the only university study,” said Gernot Wagner,
the project’s co-founder, “but it is most certainly the largest, and the
most comprehensive.”

Janos Pasztor, Ban Ki-moon’s assistant climate chief at the UN who now
leads a <https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/news/announcements/411>geoengineering
governance initiative
<https://www.carnegiecouncil.org/news/announcements/411>, said that the
Harvard scientists would only disperse minimal amounts of compounds in
their tests, under strict university controls.

“The real issue here is something much more challenging,” he said “What
does moving experimentation from the lab into the atmosphere mean for the
overall path towards eventual deployment?”

Geoengineering advocates stress that any attempt at a solar tech fix is
years away and should be viewed as a compliment to – not a substitute for –
aggressive emissions reductions action.

But the Harvard team, in a promotional video
<http://geoengineering.environment.harvard.edu/> for the project, suggest a
redirection of one percent of current climate mitigation funds to
geoengineering research, and argue that the planet could be covered with a
solar shield for as little as $10bn a year.

Geoengineering is fast and cheap but not key to halting climate change

Some senior UN climate scientists view such developments with alarm,
fearing a cash drain from proven mitigation technologies such as wind and
solar energy, to ones carrying the potential for unintended disasters.

Kevin Trenberth, a lead author for the UN’s intergovernmental panel on
climate change, said that despair at sluggish climate action, and the rise
of Donald Trump were feeding the current tech trend.

“But solar geoengineering is not the answer,” he said. “Cutting incoming
solar radiation affects the weather and hydrological cycle. It promotes
drought. It destabilizes things and could cause wars. The side effects are
many and our models are just not good enough to predict the outcomes”

Natural alterations to the earth’s radiation balance can be short-lasting,
but terrifying. A 1991 Mount Pinatubo eruption lowered global temperatures
by 0.5C, while the Mount Tambora eruption in 1815 triggered Europe’s ‘year
without a summer’, bringing crop failure, famine and disease.

A Met Office study in 2013 said that the dispersal of fine particles in the
stratosphere could precipitate a calamitous drought
<http://www.climatechangenews.com/2013/04/02/geoengineering-could-cause-drought-in-sahel/>across
North Africa.

Frank Keutsch, the Harvard atmospheric sciences professor leading the
experiment, said that the deployment of a solar geoengineering system was
“a terrifying prospect” that he hoped would never have to be considered.
“At the same time, we should never choose ignorance over knowledge in a
situation like this,” he said.

“If you put heat into the stratosphere, it may change how much water gets
transported from the troposphere to the stratosphere, and the question is
how much are you [creating] a domino effect with all kinds of consequences?
What we can do to quantify this is to start with lab studies and try to
understand the relevant properties of these aerosols.”

Stratospheric controlled perturbation experiments
<https://www.ethz.ch/en/news-and-events/eth-news/news/2015/01/geoengineering-going-outdoors.html>
(SCoPEX)
are seen as “critical” to this process and the first is planned to spray
water molecules into the stratosphere to create a 1km long and 100m wide
icy plume, which can be studied by a manoeuvrable flight balloon.

If lab tests are positive, the experiment would then be replicated with a
limestone compound which the researchers believe will neither absorb solar
or terrestrial radiation, nor deplete the ozone layer.

Bill Gates and other foundations are substantially funding the project, and
aerospace companies are thought to be taking a business interest in the
technology’s potential.

The programmme’s launch will follow a major conference involving more than
100 scientists, which begins in Washington DC today.

Solar geoengineering’s journey from the fringes of climate science to its
mainstream will be sealed at a prestigious Gordon research conference
<https://www.grc.org/programs.aspx?id=17348> in July, featuring senior
figures from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and
Oxford University.

Pasztor says that most scientific observers now see the window to a 1.5C
warmed world as “practically gone” and notes that atmospheric carbon
dioxide concentrations will continue rising for many decades after the
planet has reached a ‘net zero emissions’ point planned for mid-late
century.

But critics of solar radiation management approach this as a call to
redouble mitigation efforts and guard against the elevation of a
questionable Plan B.

“It is appropriate that we spend money on solar geoengineering research,”
said Kevin Anderson, the deputy director of the Tyndall Centre for Climate
Change Research. “But we also have to aim for 2C with climate mitigation
and act as though geoengineering doesn’t work, because it probably won’t.”

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