Luke,  Make Sunsets has tweeted invoking "trade secrets ' in denying simple 
requests to quantify how much  helium is needed  per
 " cooling credit".
This lack of transparency cannot stop anyone , policy analysts included 
from running the numbers .

Dimensional analysis  based on handbook  and commercially disclosed values 
of the physical constants of  air, helium and SO2 indicates that you can at 
best hope to lift 1.01 Kg per  STP cubic meter of 97% pure balloon grade 
He. 

Since SO2 vapor's molecular weight makes it over twice as dense as air  ( 
~64/29),  even if  if the dead weigh of the balloon and its telemetry are 
completely disregarded it will still take  a tonne  or more of helium to 
loft a  tonne of aerosol feedstock to stratospheric elevation.

As you must be aware,  the short supply of helium ( the US strategic 
reserve acquired after WWII was largely sold off by 2021)  has already 
quadrupled its cost.,  and at present , annual   global production is 
below100,000 tonnes and recoverable reserves stand at around 30 million 
tonnes globally. 

Using NOAA's numbers:
https://research.noaa.gov/article/ArtMID/587/ArticleID/2756/Simulated-geoengineering-evaluation-cooler-planet-but-with-side-effects
 it is clear that your scheme would  require lofting of a megatonne  or 
more of SO2 a year per degree K of cooling: which is not only an order of 
magnitude more that present production can bear, but enough to completely 
deplete known reserves and resources by 2050. 

Finally, US helium is almost exclusively a byproduct of natural gas 
production , and so entails substantial release of  methane and other 
hydrocarbons that are greenhouse gases  more powerful than CO2

On Wednesday, December 28, 2022 at 6:09:51 PM UTC-5 [email protected] 
wrote:

> Thanks Andrew, Olivier, Bala, and everyone else for diving in with 
> critiques here. I'm a cofounder of Make Sunsets and want to clarify a few 
> things: 
>
> *Honesty: *
> We have no desire to mislead anyone. If we make a mistake (which we will), 
> we'll correct it. 
> *Radiative Forcing:*
> I didn't make this "gram offsets a ton" number up. It comes from David 
> Keith's research:
> "a gram of aerosol in the stratosphere, delivered perhaps by high-flying 
> jets, could offset the warming effect of a ton of carbon dioxide, a factor 
> of 1 million to 1." 
> <https://keith.seas.harvard.edu/news/whats-right-temperature-earth>
> and, again: "Geoengineering’s leverage is very high—one gram of particles 
> in the stratosphere prevents the warming caused by a ton of carbon dioxide." 
> <https://longnow.org/seminars/02015/feb/17/patient-geoengineering/>
> By stating "offsetting the warming effect of 1 ton of carbon for 1 year," 
> I was trying to be more conservative than Professor Keith. I am correcting 
> "carbon" to read "carbon dioxide" on the cooling credit description right 
> now, and I'm adding a paragraph at the start of the post stating that 
> estimates vary, but a leading researcher cites a gram offsetting a ton. 
> For the several hundred dollars of cooling credits we've already sold, 
> I'll be providing evidence to each purchaser that I've delivered at least 2 
> grams per cooling credit. 
> Olivier, or anyone else: I'd be happy to post something by you to our blog 
> explaining what you estimate the radiative forcing of 1g so2 released at 
> 20km altitude from in or near the tropics will be and why. I will include 
> language of your choosing explaining that you in no way endorse what we are 
> doing.
> I very much hope to get suggestions from this community on instrumentation 
> we should fly to improve the state of the science here. Again, I'm happy to 
> do this with disclaimers about how researchers we fly things for are not 
> endorsing our efforts. Or even without revealing who the researchers are: 
> we'll fly test instruments and provide data, no questions asked:)
> *Telemetry: *
> My first 2 flights had no telemetry: in April, this was still in 
> self-funded science project territory. After burning some sulfur and 
> capturing the resultant gas, I placed this in a balloon. I then added 
> helium, underinflating the balloon substantially, and let it go. There is 
> technically a slim possibility that neither of these balloons reached the 
> stratosphere, as I acknowledged to the Technology Review reporter. I will 
> add Spot trackers to my next flights. These cut out at 18km, so I'l be able 
> to confirm that I achieve at least this altitude. If (and this is a big if) 
> I'm able to recover the balloons, I'll have a lot more data from the flight 
> computer 
> <https://www.highaltitudescience.com/collections/electronics/products/eagle-flight-computer>.
>  
> I will eventually switch to Swarms 
> <https://www.sparkfun.com/products/19236?utm_campaign=May%206%2C%202022&utm_medium=email&_hsmi=212205037&_hsenc=p2ANqtz-9EyQOQ6C-9XuSOHa7CggOC8Pf2tEow_Fppo5pXgTHO8-7gV-aHrrYpnPcliws6Ju8j2PBAX3Tkog0oVpwk8XqWX2xo0w&utm_content=212206499&utm_source=hs_email>,
>  
> which should let me transmit more data regardless of balloon recovery.
> *Pricing: *
> Bala, you're totally right that this should be priced much lower. We're 
> trying to make enough with our early flights to stay in business until we 
> get meaningful traction with customers, and we plan to eventually drop 
> prices to $1 per ton or less.
> *Reuse: *
> We are not yet reusing balloons, and Andrew is correct that latex UV 
> degradation will limit our ability to do so with weather balloons. Given 
> that balloon cost is our main expense per gram, even a few uses per balloon 
> will dramatically improve the economics here.
>
> I expect to disagree with some of you, but I hope we can do so politely 
> and assuming good intentions.
>

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