https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/scientists-look-to-bali-volcano-for-clues-to-curb-climate-change/

Scientists Look to Bali Volcano for Clues to Curb Climate Change

Volcanoes are emerging as natural laboratories to mimic geo-engineering

   - By Alister Doyle
   <https://www.scientificamerican.com/author/alister-doyle/> on December
   1, 2017

[image: Scientists Look to Bali Volcano for Clues to Curb Climate Change]
*Credit: Sonny Tumbelaka Getty Images
<http://www.gettyimages.com/license/879193434>*
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OSLO, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Climate scientists are tracking an erupting
volcano on the Indonesian holiday island of Bali for clues about a possible
short-cut to curb global warming by injecting sun-dimming chemicals high
above the Earth.

Volcanoes are emerging as natural laboratories to mimic "geo-engineering",
the idea that governments could deliberately add a veil of sulphur dioxide
high above the planet as an artificial sunshade to curb man-made global
warming.

Ash and smoke ejected so far by the Agung volcano, which has been erupting
in recent days, has not been big enough or high enough in the atmosphere to
cool world temperatures. But scientists say they are studying what would
happen if the volcano has a repeat of a far bigger eruption in 1963.
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"I've been doing some Bali simulations with the U.K. Met office climate
model as 'what ifs', and also some geo-engineering simulations," said Jim
Haywood, professor of atmospheric science at the University of Exeter.

He estimated that Agung spewed eight million tonnes of sulphur dioxide into
the stratosphere in 1963, about 10-15 kms above the Earth's surface, enough
to trim world temperatures for months. That eruption killed more than 1,000
people in Bali.

"Many scientists are keeping an eye on the Agung eruption in Bali," said
Alan Robock, a professor of climate science at Rutgers University.
"Volcanic eruptions serve as an analogue for the idea of humans creating
such a cloud."

Satellite measurements of eruptions have only recently become precise
enough to exploit volcanoes as models for geo-engineering.

That was impossible, for instance, when Mount Pinatubo in the Philippines
erupted in 1991 and blew about 20 million tonnes of sulphur dioxide into
the stratosphere, the second biggest eruption of the 20th century after one
in Alaska in 1912.
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Mount Pinatubo had a cooling effect on the Earth because the sun-dimming
sulphur spread worldwide.

"Since Pinatubo we've got a lot better" at measuring the effects of big
eruptions, said Matthew Watson of the University of Bristol. "We're waiting
for something to happen on a scale where we can start thinking about what
it means for geo-engineering."

He estimated that the Agung volcano has probably ejected only about 10,000
tonnes of sulphur dioxide in the latest eruption, and not as high as the
stratosphere.

Governments agree they should focus most on cutting greenhouse gas
emissions under the 2015 Paris agreement rather than on
science-fiction-like short-cuts to limit temperatures blamed for causing
more heatwaves, floods and rising sea levels.

But current policies put the world on track to overshoot the Paris goal of
limiting rising temperatures to "well below" two degrees Celsius (3.6
Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times.
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U.S. President Donald Trump, who doubts man-made emissions are the prime
cause of warming, also plans to pull out of the Paris deal and promote the
U.S. fossil fuel industry. That risks further weakening the Paris plan.

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