https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/17/atmospheric-dust-cooling-climate-change?CMP=share_btn_tw


Material from *dry landscapes* has surged since the 1800s, possibly helping *to
cool the planet for decades*
[image: view of sahara desert]
Maanvi Singh <https://www.theguardian.com/profile/maanvi-singh> in Los
Angeles
@maanvissingh <https://www.twitter.com/maanvissingh>
*Tue 17 Jan 2023 *

*Dust that billows up from desert storms and arid landscapes has helped
cool the planet for the past several decades, and its presence in the
atmosphere may have obscured the true extent of global heating caused by
fossil fuel emissions.*

Atmospheric dust has increased by about 55% since the mid-1800s, an
analysis suggests. And that increasing dust may have hidden up to 8% of
warming from carbon emissions.

atmospheric scientists and climate researchers in the US and Europe
attempts to tally the varied, complex ways in which dust has affected
global climate patterns, concluding that overall, it has worked to somewhat
counteract the warming effects of greenhouse gasses. The study, published
in Nature Reviews Earth and Environment, warns that current climate models
fail to take into account the effect of atmospheric dust.

“We’ve been predicting for a long time that we’re headed toward a bad place
when it comes to greenhouse warming,” said Jasper Kok, an atmospheric
physicist at UCLA who led the research. “What this research shows is that
so far, we’ve had the emergency brake on.”

About 26m tons of dust are suspended in our atmosphere, scientists
estimate. Its effects are complicated.

Dust, along with synthetic particulate pollution, can cool the planet in
several ways. These mineral particles can reflect sunlight away from the
Earth and dissipate cirrus clouds high in the atmosphere that warm the
planet. Dust that falls into the ocean encourages the growth of
phytoplankton – microscopic plants in the ocean – that absorb carbon
dioxide and produce oxygen.

Dust can also have a warming effect in some cases – darkening snow and ice,
and prompting them to absorb more heat.

But after they tallied everything up, it seemed clear to researchers that
the dust had an overall cooling effect.

“There are all these different factors that play into the role of mineral
dusts in our atmosphere,” said Gisela Winckler, a climate scientist
<https://people.climate.columbia.edu/users/profile/gisela-winckler> at the
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University. “This is the first
review of its kind to really bring all these different aspects together.”

Although climate models have so far been able to predict global heating
with quite a bit of accuracy, Winckler said the review made clear that
these predictions haven’t been able to pin down the role of dust especially
well.

Limited records from ice cores, marine sediment records, and other sources
suggest that dust overall had also been increasing since pre-industrial
times – in part due to development, agriculture, and other human impacts on
landscapes. But the amount of dust also seems to have been decreasing since
the 1980s.

More data and research is needed to better understand these dust patterns,
Winckler said, and better predict how they will change in coming years.

But if dust in the atmosphere is decreasing, the warming effects of
greenhouse gases could speed up.

“We could start to experience faster and faster warming because of this,”
Kok said. “And maybe we’re waking up to that reality too late.”

*Source: The Guardian *

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