https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2019/07/18/world/science-health-world/scientists-terrible-idea-calls-snow-cannons-pump-ice-bid-save-antarctic-ice-shelf/

Scientists' 'terrible' idea calls for snow cannons to pump ice in bid to
save Antarctic ice shelf

AFP-JIJI

   - JUL 18, 2019
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PARIS - Scientists seeking to avoid catastrophic sea-level rises from the
melting West Antarctic ice sheet have come up with a “terrible” solution:
use snow cannons to pump trillions of tons of ice back on top.

The gargantuan ice sheet contains enough frozen water to raise global sea
levels by 6 meters (20 feet).

Just 1 meter of sea-level rise would be enough to displace around 190
million people, and a rise of 3 meters would imperil mega-cities across the
world, including New York, Shanghai and Tokyo.

In particular, scientists are increasingly concerned that the Pine Island
and Thwaites glaciers in Western Antarctica — which could potentially cause
a sea-level rise of 3 meters — have reached a “tipping point” that could
see irreversible melting irrespective of cuts to greenhouse gas emissions.

And as planet-warming emissions continue to rise despite the Paris
agreement on climate change, awareness is growing that limiting temperature
rises to under 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) — the treaty’s
cornerstone goal — may be insufficient to avert disaster.

Geo-engineering projects — large-scale, deliberate intervention in Earth’s
climate — have garnered much attention in recent years, such as injecting
particles into space or storing CO2 in the ground.

But few have addressed the issue of sea-level rises, which is likely to
cause more human misery than just about any other climate impact.

Experts at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) on
Wednesday released their model for one such approach: a massive
displacement of seawater from melted ice, sucked from the sea and showered
back on top of the West Antarctic glaciers to stop them from disappearing.

“It’s a terrible thing to do, no doubt about it, and we are not suggesting
this by any means,” said Anders Levermann, PIK physicist and lead study
author of the study published in Science Advances.

“But all physical modeling shows that if we keep to the Paris climate
agreement to 2 C of global warming, we will eventually get 5 meters of
sea-level rise and potentially more.”

In the simulations, Levermann and the team determined that the glaciers
could be saved by a massive artificial surge in annual snowfall.

In fact, the amount needed to stabilize the glaciers would be at least 7.4
trillion tons of snow — the equivalent in mass of 150,000 jumbo jets.

The operation would involve hundreds of snow cannons, powered by 12,000
wind turbines, spraying sea water that would fall as snow over an area the
size of Costa Rica.

Levermann stressed that the plan is currently just a hypothesis, and that
to succeed it would need to be coupled with radical emissions cuts to stand
any chance of success.

Such a project has not been costed and would require “something resembling
an Antarctic moon station” with years of round-the-clock work, Levermann
said.

Previous geo-engineering options to stave off West Antarctic melt have
included constructing Eiffel Tower-size columns on the seabed to prop up
the ice shelf, and a 100-meter-tall, 100-kilometer-long berm to block warm
water flowing underneath.

Levermann admitted the PIK project, if ever realized, would have “terrible”
effects on Antarctica, but insisted that limiting global sea-level rises is
a desirable trade-off.

“It’s as big as North America from Mexico to Canada. There’s no place on
Earth that’s protected on that scale,” he said.

“This endeavor would make Western Antarctica an industrialized compound.
But if we’ve destabilized (the ice shelf), everything will change
dramatically anyway.

“So we either build our coastal protections as high as 5 meters worldwide,
or do something crazy like this.”

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