SilverLining is celebrating its five-year anniversary. At this milestone,
we are reflecting on our progress across the many initiatives that...
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=a55b84d70c&e=76c65497ea>

Dear Friends,

SilverLining is celebrating its five-year anniversary. At this milestone,
we are reflecting on our progress across the many initiatives that
collectively deliver against our mission of ensuring a safe near-term
climate. Last year, Earth’s climate breached the 1.5℃ threshold over a
twelve month period, which, when we started SilverLining five years ago,
seemed like a distant threat. Our goal then was to drive information on
near-term climate risks and interventions, to expand the community of
knowledgeable stakeholders, and to promote approaches for making equitable
and effective decisions that would keep people and natural systems safe in
advance of this kind of escalation in climate change. With our broad
community of collaborators, we have met or exceeded many of our objectives,
but the urgency has intensified.

Over the next several weeks, we’ll send a special series of newsletters on
the impact SilverLining has had in each of our major practice areas: 1)
research, 2) policy, and 3) equity.

Today’s note focuses on our physical sciences research initiatives,
including our efforts to advance open science to accelerate an evaluation
of the safety and risks of climate change with and without climate
intervention - the Safe Climate Research Initiative - and our efforts to
fill critical gaps in atmospheric observations - Earth Information
Programs. These initiatives deliver against a collaboratively defined
roadmap for research described in our 2022 Report, Near-Term Climate Risks
and Interventions: A Roadmap for Research, U.S. Research Investment and
International Scientific Cooperation
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=c17b5ec0f6&e=76c65497ea>.
The report identifies critical gaps in observations, models and process
studies relating to the influence of aerosols on the atmosphere, clouds and
climate. These gaps have become more prominent with recent concerns about
the cooling effects of shipping and other pollution in the low atmosphere,
and newly observed pollution in the stratosphere. The research initiatives
described here embody our coordinated effort to advance the critical
science required for sufficient understanding of near-term climate risks
and potential interventions to assess them effectively.

Raising over $20 million in funding for research, SilverLining has directly
and indirectly supported extraordinary programs and teams at leading
universities, government agencies, national meteorological centers and
research laboratories. We are grateful to our collaborators and
institutional partners, and the generous funders of our efforts, for their
support in advancing this critical science for the public good. We are
honored to share some of these efforts with you here and will be in touch
again soon.

Best regards,
Kelly Wanser
Executive Director, SilverLining

*Safe Climate Research Initiative*
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=7a760a41ad&e=76c65497ea>

*Safe Climate Research Initiative scientist, Jyoti Singh, and atmospheric
scientist Michael Diamond at the American Geophysical Union Annual Meeting.
Over 50% of posters on SRM were from SCRI researchers.*

SilverLining's Safe Climate Research Initiative (SCRI) collaboratively
defines (roadmaps) for scientific research
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=4ef5714824&e=76c65497ea>
and supports studies to advance society’s understanding of near-term
climate risks and interventions. These center on a key driver of near-term
climate change, and of the most prominent form of rapid climate
intervention - the influence of aerosols on clouds and climate.

SCRI has made over $7 million in grants, and directed an additional $15
million in funding, supporting over 70 researchers worldwide in the US,
Canada, UK, Europe, Africa and elsewhere. SCRI awardees and collaborators
include leading researchers from national climate centers, UK Met Office
and the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), atmospheric
science centers of excellence, the University of Washington and Colorado
State University, and climate systems and impacts studies centers including
Rutgers University, Cornell University, University of Cape Town, Desert
Research Institute and a number of global south institutions through our
support for the DEGREES Initiative.

A catalyst for SRM science, the SCRI has generated over 30 peer-reviewed
publications
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=912ec2e64d&e=76c65497ea>,
new climate and atmospheric process model capabilities, a new talent
pipeline of early-career researchers, support for early-career and Global
South researchers’ presentations at conferences and meetings. Importantly,
it has generated substantial science and information on research
requirements that has informed official reports, policy processes and
dialogues, notably the 2022 UN Ozone Assessment
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=b90999910f&e=76c65497ea>,
UN Environment Programme: One Atmophere
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=0fe3b47f79&e=76c65497ea>
and the recent US government report on SRM research
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=f3ba1b425c&e=76c65497ea>
.
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=8be29d41a8&e=76c65497ea>

*Near Term Climate Risk and Intervention: A Roadmap for Research, U.S.
Research Investment, and International Scientific Cooperation (2023
SilverLining)*

*Roadmap Development *

In 2020, SilverLining team members began collaborating with researchers to
define a roadmap of the research, observations, model enhancements and
technology innovation required to assess the potential for solar radiation
modification (SRM) to reduce near-term climate risk within 5 years. In
2023, we published this 5-year roadmap as both a peer-reviewed paper
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=9c378be20c&e=76c65497ea>
and major report
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=bcd8038532&e=76c65497ea>
calling for $2.6 billion in new annual funding for U.S. basic climate
research—$13 billion over 5 years—to provide the capabilities and resources
needed to assess the impacts of pollution aerosols on climate and the
stratosphere and the potential for SRM approaches to improve near-term
climate safety. With these funding estimates, this first-of-its-kind report
complemented a landmark Congressionally-mandated report
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=563d7ec171&e=76c65497ea>
from the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP),which
was supported by SilverLining’s advocacy efforts. SilverLining’s research
programs are designed to collaboratively evolve and advance against this
roadmap.
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=95af18776a&e=76c65497ea>

*Richter et al, 2022, Assessing Responses and Impacts of Solar climate
intervention on the Earth system with stratospheric aerosol injection
(ARISE-SAI): protocol and initial results from the first simulations. Read
the paper
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=17e73f92a7&e=76c65497ea>.*

*Assessing Impacts and Responses of Climate Intervention on the Earth
Systems (ARISE)*

The Assessing Impacts and Responses of Climate Intervention on the Earth
Systems (ARISE) Program is a collaboration among senior climate model
developers and climate impacts researchers to define, develop, and deliver
high-fidelity (representing, in detail, relevant systems and processes)
simulations of scenarios for near-term climate change and SRM interventions.

The effort began in 2020 with the first-ever high-fidelity climate model
simulations of Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI) under median scenarios
for climate change using two major climate models—the National Center for
Atmospheric Research’s Community Earth System Model (CESM) and the UK MET
Office UK Earth System Model (UKESM). These simulations produced an
unprecedented and highly comprehensive dataset for studying the influence
of SAI on climate and natural systems - now widely adopted by researchers.

The ARISE dataset was used to support analysis of coupled climate processes
with respect to climate change and SRM. Researchers at Cornell University
used ARISE to help define the parameter space of SAI interventions
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=a3ed4e74cc&e=76c65497ea>.
Studies
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=7141f3fda7&e=76c65497ea>
led by scientists at Colorado State University integrated AI into Earth
system modeling to detect and attribute SAI interventions.  Rutgers
University's RISCI lab is using the highly detailed ARISE model outputs for
novel studies of the effects of SAI
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=d27d6a6a0f&e=76c65497ea>
on agricultural crops. The UK Met Office is undertaking the first model
intercomparisons of high-fidelity SAI scenarios
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=4097350527&e=76c65497ea>
.

More recently, collaborators began the first-ever multi-model, high
fidelity simulations of Marine Cloud Brightening (MCB) across three major
climate models: CESM, the UK MET Office UKESM, and the Department of
Energy's Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM). This included an
ongoing collaboration to enhance the representation of cloud aerosol
processes in global climate models, a critical activity for all of climate
science.

*Advanced Analysis Techniques*: ARISE simulations and cloud capabilities
supported an innovative research effort at Colorado State university to use
machine learning to detect the impacts of climate change, predict weather
and climate a few weeks to decades into the future, and explore the
potential outcomes of SAI climate intervention. The effort was featured at
the AWS advanced technology summit, Re:MARS in a highly accessible and
visual session. Watch the video, here
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=d35e45b9f9&e=76c65497ea>
.
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=172ae601a4&e=76c65497ea>

*SilverLining capacity-building workshop during the World Climate Research
Programme Conference in Rwanda, providing hands-on experience in running
the Community Earth System Model (CESM) on public cloud services*

*Cloud for Climate*

While often vulnerable to climate change, researchers in developing
countries have a limited ability to project and analyze climate impacts for
their regions. One critical barrier is the opportunity to access and use
the climate models and large datasets that require high performance
computing, a barrier to many types of studies and most advanced research.
SilverLining and its collaborators are working to overcome this and other
barriers by making climate models and datasets available as services on the
cloud and building related local expert technical capacity.

Climate models are among the most computing intensive applications in the
world. In collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and NCAR, as part of
the ARISE program, SilverLining supported the first-ever full production
climate model simulations on the public cloud, implementing CESM on AWS, an
effort that took many months and involved advanced high-performance
computing experts from both NCAR and SilverLining. This effort led to both
the availability of simulation data sets on the cloud and the possibility
of using the cloud for advanced climate model simulations from anywhere in
the world.

The datasets from the ARISE simulations are openly available on the cloud
via Amazon Sustainable Data Initiative
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=ac03bc3b01&e=76c65497ea>
for access by researchers around the world, enabling more equitable
opportunities to study near-term climate change and SRM. Over time, we hope
to make many of the world's leading global climate models, related
datasets, and enabling tools available to researchers around the world as
user-friendly services on the cloud. View a brief video
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=d90454ae18&e=76c65497ea>
or
listen to the AWS podcast
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=b469dfd2d3&e=76c65497ea>
to learn more.

At the World Climate Research Program Open Science Conference in Kigali,
Rwanda in October 2023, SilverLining, the African Institute of Mathematical
Sciences (AIMS), NCAR and AWS hosted a workshop for researchers to gain
hands-on experience running simulations on the CESM model using web-based
services. Due to the overwhelming demand, NCAR has offered to extend the
program virtually, laying the foundation for ongoing development and
expansion of the program. More work, and support, are needed to deliver the
required capabilities and support to a broad community of researchers, but
a critical foundation has been laid.

*Researchers Jessica Medrado and Dongyun Shin at Palo Alto Research Center
(PARC) demonstrating the Cloud Aerosol Research instrument (CARI)*

*Marine Cloud Brightening (MCB) Program *

SilverLining partners with, and supports, a landmark research program to
improve understanding of one the greatest uncertainties in climate science
- the effects of aerosols on clouds and climate - and to evaluate the
potential for brightening marine clouds with sea-salt particles to reduce
climate risks and impacts. Housed at the top institution for atmospheric
science globally, the University of Washington, the program includes over
40 researchers and five institutional partners. Over the past five years,
SilverLining provided funding, scientific collaboration, non-science
program support and expertise to establish its technology research
partnership with Palo Alto Research Center (now known as PARC, an SRI
program).

These activities helped drive groundbreaking advances in this landmark
effort including the delivery of the first-ever instrument for scaled
aerosol generation for the controlled study of cloud-aerosol effects, the
Cloud Aerosol Research Instrument (CARI). The program also integrated MCB
R&D with SilverLining’s ARISE modeling efforts to help develop a roadmap of
studies designed to produce realistic simulations of MCB, including pending
publication of a protocol for simulation of Marine Cloud Brightening in
global climate models. SilverLining’s Executive Director Kelly Wanser
co-founded the UW MCB Program and it has partnered with SilverLining since
SilverLining’s inception.

*Scientists at the University of Central Florida lab*

*SilverLining Stratospheric Aerosol Intervention (SSAI) Program *

In 2022, SilverLining convened experts in stratospheric science and
aerospace from NASA, NOAA and various universities to define a roadmap for
research on the processes related to the effects of aerosols in the
stratosphere essential to understanding and projecting effects of the
introduction of aerosols and other material into the stratosphere from
various potential sources, including wildfires, space and air traffic and
stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), the most prominent form of rapid
climate intervention. From this roadmap and community of experts,
SilverLining commenced a research program that now includes laboratory,
chamber and small-scale field studies interfaced with modeling and various
scales, that together are designed to improve model projections of the
effects of the SAI at scales potentially large enough to significantly
impact the climate or environment. The SSAI program interfaces with ARISE
to inform model representations and simulations of global climate effects
and impacts.

Since its inception, the SSRI program has achieved several milestones in
fundamental science on aerosol processes for sulfur dioxide and other
material, including high-fidelity aerosol-chemistry plume model simulations
of stratospheric conditions and aerosol plumes.

*Methane Oxidation*

In 2021, SilverLining reviewed existing science and produced research
recommendations for a proposed climate intervention to reduce
concentrations of methane in the atmosphere by dispersing iron salts to
convert methane to CO2, also known as methane oxidation. On the basis of
these findings, SilverLining supported researchers at Cornell University
and the University of Copenhagen in undertaking laboratory-based
characterization of the processes underlying iron salt methane oxidation
and in the model development and simulations required to investigate the
potential efficacy and impacts of their use at scale in the atmosphere.
Those efforts produced two foundational
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=1db13adccb&e=76c65497ea>
publications
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=fb923ae915&e=76c65497ea>
and formed the basis of an ongoing international research collaboration,
now being carried forward by Spark Climate Solutions as part of their
Atmospheric Methane Removal program.

*Earth Information Programs*

*SilverLining scientific balloon engineer prepares radio receiving
equipment, researchers release balloons at the University of Reunion Island*

*Rapid Response Volcano Observations*

*Hunga Eruption Response Campaign, February 2022*: In a groundbreaking
effort enabled by support from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation,
Schmidt Futures and Lyda Hill, SilverLining catalyzed rapid observations of
the Hunga eruption, a rare large natural experiment on emissions into the
atmosphere and opportunity to gain insights into the effects of emissions
into the stratosphere. Supporting scientists at the University of Houston,
the University of Réunion, and other institutions, and filling a gap in
rapid funding capabilities, SilverLining facilitated a NOAA-led campaign to
conduct balloon-based observations of the atmosphere during this rare
event. The knowledge gained contributed to advancing understanding of
atmospheric processes relevant to understanding of the effects of
stratospheric pollution and stratospheric aerosol injection, including
improving model representations of stratospheric conditions. View images
and learn more about this initiative, here
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=0585ec3238&e=76c65497ea>
.

*Reykjanes Eruption Response Campaign, December 2023*: Building on learning
from the Hunga response, SilverLining mobilized an effort to support
observations of projected eruptions
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=234d516299&e=76c65497ea>
of the volcano in the Reykjanes peninsula of southwest Iceland. While
smaller than Hunga, such eruptions can lead to emissions of material into
the low-cloud layer whose study is relevant to understanding the climate
effects of reductions in pollution aerosols, such as the reductions in ship
emissions arising from International Maritime Organization (IMO)
regulations in 2020, and marine cloud brightening. When such eruptions
occur, SilverLining will aim to support observations of a large natural
experiment relevant to understanding cloud-aerosol effects and how they
might influence climate change in the future.

*Platforms of Opportunity *

SilverLining’s Platforms of Opportunity Program aims to bridge large,
critical gaps in climate-relevant atmospheric observations by leveraging
commercial and other existing ships and aircraft to carry instruments for
atmospheric observations.

*Ships of Opportunity for Atmospheric Research (SOAR)*:  The scarcity of
observational data on greenhouse gas and aerosols in the marine atmosphere
poses a significant challenge in modeling and evaluating their influences
on the climate system and predicting future climate changes. In 2022,
SilverLining established a collaborative network of atmospheric science,
engineering, operations and other university, intergovernmental, and US
science agency experts to analyze scientific requirements, instrument
capabilities, and possibilities for piloting and developing a global
network of ship-based observations of greenhouse gases and aerosols in the
marine atmosphere. The goal of SOAR is to build on research systems and
existing climate observation data networks to expand coverage, particularly
in remote and sensitive regions.

In collaboration with NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory (GML), Accenture,
and Dutch maritime nonprofit OceansX, SilverLining supported a pilot of
greenhouse gas and aerosol radiative measurements from vessels operated by
global shipping company Maersk. The objective is to leverage learning from
these pilots to design a global ship-borne observing network and to develop
instrument packages that have  the advanced features of today’s bespoke
research instruments as well as  the operational features and cost profile
required for scale.

*Airplanes of Opportunity*: In collaboration with NOAA GML, Airplanes of
Opportunity supports the pilot and development of a network of atmospheric
observing instruments on commercial aircraft to address critical data gaps
in greenhouse gas and other atmospheric measurements. With routes arcing
from the surface to the upper atmosphere and back, aircraft platforms
approach could transform observations of greenhouse gas source emissions
from the surface of the Earth, including pollution sources and feedbacks
from natural systems.

In 2021 NOAA led an engineering effort and regulatory approval process to
install a package of sophisticated greenhouse gas and atmosphere observing
instruments on a commercial aircraft, culminating in a pilot flight on
the Alaska
Airlines Boeing Ecodemonstrator
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=580f85ee3a&e=76c65497ea>.
NOAA, SilverLining and other collaborators are developing a roadmap of
requirements and plans for the development of instrument packages,
operational models and carrier partnerships for a scaled network of
observations.

*SilverLining with the team at NOAA Chemical Science Laboratory. From left
to right: Drew Rollins, Troy Thornberry, Gordan Novak, Kelly Wanser, NASA
WB-57 preflight for campaign as part of NOAA’s Stratospheric Aerosol
processes, Budget and Radiative Effects (SABRE) program*

*Stratospheric Observations *

In late 2023, SilverLining partnered with Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL) to convene a working meeting of experts to
discuss the state of efforts to monitor the stratosphere, the requirements
and gaps, and what forums or workshops are needed to advance progress
toward a comprehensive approach to safety and security for the climate and
stratosphere.

The discussion featured recent findings from stratospheric sampling flights
done as part of  NOAA’s Stratospheric Aerosol processes, Budget and
Radiative Effects (SABRE) mission to assess new aerosol populations in the
stratosphere from large wildfires, air traffic, rocket emissions and debris
from satellites. It highlighted the sparseness of stratospheric
observations and a pending “data desert” associated with the end of life of
a unique satellite instrument for global coverage of atmospheric
constituents, the microwave limb sounder (MLS). SilverLining, JHUAPL and
collaborators will expand the discussion to advance the definition of
requirements and gaps in 2024.

*The Path Forward*

With research programs that outperformed expectations, SilverLining now is
directing considerable energy driving philanthropic and public funding to
support these remarkable researchers, institutions and research efforts in
their next phases, and identifying and supporting other efforts and teams
that can contribute to the mission of driving information to ensure a safe
near-term climate. We welcome your help.

We are profoundly grateful to our collaborators, partners, and funders who
had the vision, insight and strength of purpose to work at the cutting edge
of this complex, deeply important and sometimes misunderstood area of
science. We look forward to advancing research together in 2024 and beyond.

*About SilverLining*

*SilverLining is a non-profit organization dedicated to ensuring that
society has sufficient options to address near-term climate risk.
SilverLining engages with the research community, policymakers,
technologists, civil society and people from all walks of life to help
advance research and innovation in efforts to ensure a safe climate. Learn
more at our website
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=b3c75f66fa&e=76c65497ea>
and follow us on social media below.*
[image: Twitter]
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=a41fb31dca&e=76c65497ea>
[image: LinkedIn]
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=f51a7fa1ef&e=76c65497ea>
[image: Website]
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/track/click?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=5d47653251&e=76c65497ea>
*Copyright © 2023 SilverLining, All rights reserved.*

*Our mailing address is:*
SilverLining
500 North Capitol St NW #210
Washington, DC 20001

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/profile?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=1c05823662&e=76c65497ea&c=6594312f3a>
or unsubscribe from this list
<https://ngo.us20.list-manage.com/unsubscribe?u=effa7b2192dde9046ae5e5444&id=1c05823662&t=b&e=76c65497ea&c=6594312f3a>
.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAHJsh99ciWbRnx%2BX_kLDz7-qJ_BAz5MiYRVwZAp7Kwpnwu1Wxg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to