Readers of these lists are familiar with Dr Stephen Salter, Emeritus
Professor of Engineering Design at Edinburgh University.  Stephen is a
leading world expert in technology to restore the brightness of marine
clouds following John Latham
<https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsta.2012.0086> 's
suggestion to exploit the Twomey effect.  Sean Twomey led the way with
experimental proof that submicron aerosol particles will produce optimal
brightening, in research based on observations of cloud properties which
have been replicated with good agreement by
<https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/atsc/57/16/1520-0469_2000_057_26
84_eoaoca_2.0.co_2.xml> Andrew Ackerman.

Stephen has great talent as an engineer, but testing of his Marine Cloud
Rebrightening (MCRB) designs has been prevented by a lack of funds.  We are
writing now to ask if you could make a financial contribution to support
Stephen's work through donations at  <https://rebrighten.org/donate/>
https://rebrighten.org/donate/.

Brighter clouds mean cooler seas, reducing the energy available for intense
storms.  If the science on MCRB had been recognised and adopted a decade
ago, as proposed in the 2012 article
<https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsta.2012.0086> Marine Cloud
Brightening by John Latham et al, catastrophes like the sudden Category Five
Hurricane Otis that devastated Acapulco on 25 October could have been
averted, as could the Category Five Typhoon Rai that struck the Philippines
in December 2021, by cooling the Pacific Ocean sea surface temperature.  

Although the climate policy community has not recognised the need for
cooling action to increase planetary albedo, many now see this as the most
vital immediate step to address global warming.  A small group of supporters
are working with Stephen to implement his proposal.  We have established a
website,  <http://rebrighten.org/> rebrighten.org, and are working with the
Climate Foundation and the UK National Centre for Atmospheric Science to
raise funds to develop local marine cloud rebrightening, starting with
retaining a small group of student interns to work with Stephen to ensure
his extensive knowledge can be applied. Any contribution toward this funding
goal would be extremely welcome.   So far, USD $6,500 has been raised. 

Dr James Hansen has endorsed Stephen's proposal for marine cloud
brightening. In his recent major paper
<https://academic.oup.com/oocc/article/3/1/kgad008/7335889> Global Warming
in the Pipeline, Dr Hansen described sea salt droplets sprayed into the air
by autonomous sailboats as the most innocuous way to deploy sunlight
reflection methods essential to locally restoring pre-industrial cloud cover
and temperature. This important endorsement should help others to recognise
and support the urgency of funding for local marine cloud rebrightening,
starting with Stephen's work.

Stephen recently purchased a large engineering workshop in Edinburgh,
suitable for testing MCRB designs.  The aim is to work in cooperation with
the range of groups around the world who are studying how to produce the
submicron sea salt aerosol particles needed to optimise MCRB generation and
delivery, and to overcome the governance barriers that prevent action to
cool the planet and mitigate climate change.

Dr Salter needs an agile team providing engineering support to work with him
at his workshop in Edinburgh to validate and build his designs to test and
deploy MCRB technology.  Our website  <https://rebrighten.org/>
rebrighten.org is raising funds for these engineering positions, through
donations at  <https://rebrighten.org/donate/>
https://rebrighten.org/donate/. Funds are managed by the
<https://www.climatefoundation.org/> Climate Foundation led by Dr Brian von
Herzen.  Funds raised by  <http://rebrighten.org/> rebrighten.org also plan
to support modelling of local MCRB deployment, managed by Dr Alan Gadian at
the  <https://ncas.ac.uk/> National Centre for Atmospheric Science at Leeds
University. All donations are tax deductible in the US.  For donations in
the UK, Canada and Australia please contact Brian von Herzen at the Climate
Foundation -  <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected] . 

We want to increase public awareness of MCRB as an essential cooling method,
with potential to be a fast, safe, cheap, feasible way to mitigate and
reverse global warming, subject to proof of concept.  As Dr Hansen says in
Global Warming in the Pipeline, local MCRB will use strong scientific
governance to assess any risks as well as benefits.

The status of MCRB is that several groups around the world are working on
the design of submicron monodisperse methods to generate sea salt aerosol
spray suitable for adequate local cloud rebrightening.  The ideal deployment
platform is autonomous spray vessels moving to the location where brighter
clouds can provide the most help.  Stephen Salter is responsible for this
vessel concept and design, and has designed testing methods for aerosol
generation using a spray tunnel.  He now needs funding to take the
technology forward. After laboratory proof of concept for spray generation,
demonstration of spray technology will be needed in field tests, alongside
prototyping of deployment vessels. 

Our fundraising effort seeks financial contributions, suggestions, contacts
and endorsements.  Any assistance you could provide including through
donations at  <https://rebrighten.org/donate/>
https://rebrighten.org/donate/ would be greatly appreciated.  Some further
information is attached.

Thank you for your support.

Robert Tulip

 

 <https://rebrighten.org/donate/> https://rebrighten.org/donate/

 

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