https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/trial-cloud-brightening-controversy-california-rcna153092

Alameda, California, has found itself thrust into a debate about whether
and how to explore geoengineering projects to fight global warming.

*By Evan Bush*

*25 May 2024*

Scientists surprised the leaders of a Northern California city last month,
when they unveiled a project to study technology that could one day be used
to brighten clouds and mitigate global warming.

The experiment involved spraying saltwater along the deck of the USS Hornet
— an aircraft carrier docked in Alameda that serves as a museum — to test
devices that can create and measure plumes of aerosols. The team planned
three sprays per day, four days a week for 20 weeks.

The actions themselves were harmless — and, indeed, environmental
consultants the city hired to assess the project found no safety concerns,
according to a report published Thursday
<https://alameda.legistar.com/LegislationDetail.aspx?ID=6703251&GUID=9796CAC7-D282-4A95-A7A6-E2D21D1ACA0F&Options=&Search=>.
But the work represents a first step toward understanding whether this type
of technology, at scale, could be used to make clouds reflect more sunlight
back to space and slow some global warming effects.

This possibility has thrust the city into the center of a larger debate
over whether and how the exploration of geoengineering technologies to
fight climate change ought to be explored — and who should have a say.

The project, led by a team from the University of Washington, represents
one of the first attempts to test marine cloud-brightening technology in
the United States.

City officials and constituents in Alameda said they only learned the full
details of it after The New York Times published a story
<https://www.nytimes.com/2024/04/02/climate/global-warming-clouds-solar-geoengineering.html?pgtype=Article&action=click&module=RelatedLinks>
in
April. The Times said the researchers knew their testing might be
controversial to some, so they had “kept the details tightly held.”

Following the article’s publication, city leaders ordered the scientists to
halt the project, saying it was in violation of the lease with the USS
Hornet. The Alameda city council will decide the project’s fate in a June 4
meeting.

The idea behind cloud brightening concepts is to increase the number of
water droplets within low-level ocean clouds to boost their reflectivity
and potentially make the clouds last longer
<https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adi8594>. That process could
lead clouds to reflect more sunlight to space. It wouldn’t help with other
climate problems, like ocean acidification, and some researchers are
concerned that, at scale, it could shift atmospheric circulation with
unintended consequences
<https://www.annualreviews.org/content/journals/10.1146/annurev-earth-031920-083456>
.

Scientists are far from even experimenting on that level. On the aircraft
carrier’s deck, the researchers were simply using a machine that looks like
a snowmaker to spray saltwater.

“The studies involve brief emissions of salt-water that evolves into a
plume of tiny salt particles whose number, size and path are measured by
instruments installed along the flight deck of the Hornet,” Rob Wood, a
professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Washington and
project leader, said in a statement.

The researchers had planned to study how different-sized particles affect
the plume.

Wood said the studies are “basic science research” and not “designed to
alter clouds or any aspect of the local weather or climate.”
[image: Fog blankets the Golden Gate Bridge of San Francisco]The Golden
Gate Bridge during a foggy sunset in San Francisco in 2023.Tayfun Coskun /
Anadolu via Getty Images file

The safety assessment released Thursday identified no potential harms from
the work. “

We do not see this operation as a health risk to the surrounding
community,” consultant and engineer Andrew Romolo wrote in a letter to city
leaders. In a separate letter, a biological consultant said the plumes of
saltwater wouldn’t harm terns (a type of seabird) or any other sensitive
species.

Laura Fies, the executive director of the USS Hornet Museum, said her
initial conversations with the research team centered mostly on immediate
plans for the work, rather than its long-term implications. So the
resulting controversy was a surprise.

“We were like — we’re making some seafoam breeze, that’s cute, that’s fun,”
Fies said. “And you know, I fully admit, that the exciting, controversial
portion is like the most newsworthy. It’s also years away from what they’re
doing right now.”

Fies said the aircraft carrier has hosted events with pyrotechnics and
Jeeps driving around on deck.

“We do wilder things on the flight deck all the time,” Fies said. “What’s
being sprayed across the deck is saltwater, very clean saltwater. It didn’t
occur to us that the city would want to come inspect with a Hazmat team.”

Most geoengineering ideas are theoretical and untested. Atmospheric
scientists say there is no evidence of any large-scale programs
<https://www.nbcnews.com/science/environment/tennessee-lawmakers-ban-geoengineering-allusions-chemtrails-rcna145015>,
but scientists are taking baby steps to understand the basic physics and
feasibility of some possibilities.

The broad implications of this research frighten some people, since certain
kinds of geoengineering concepts have the potential to disrupt weather
patterns, cause pollution or change the appearance of the sky. Proponents
argue that humanity is already geoengineering Earth’s atmosphere by pumping
carbon emissions into the atmosphere, and that the risks of global warming
could be worse.

When it comes to regulation, geoengineering is something of a Wild
West. Tennessee
became the first state to broadly ban the practice
<https://wapp.capitol.tn.gov/apps/BillInfo/default.aspx?BillNumber=SB2691&GA=113>
this
year. But the lawmakers’ debates there were marked by outlandish conspiracy
theories about so-called “chemtrails,” widespread confusion and inaccurate
suggestions that large, federal geoengineering programs were already
underway.

In Alameda, Sarah Henry, a city spokesperson, said, the city manager’s
office had been notified that “the Hornet had a research partner doing work
on the Hornet and what they described as misting down the flight deck.”

“We didn’t know the University of Washington was a partner and we didn’t
know the details of the research being done and that’s why this has come to
the point,” she said.

The research team also includes scientists with SRI International, a
nonprofit research institute founded by Stanford University, and
SilverLining, a Washington, D.C. nonprofit focused on climate interventions
<https://www.silverlining.ngo/about>.

The scientists say they got an outside assessment of regulatory and permit
requirements
<https://atmos.uw.edu/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/2024.04.01-Assessment-of-Approval-Processes.pdf>
before
launching the project.

Josh Horton, a senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School who studies
solar geoengineering policy, said such projects tend to stir deeper
concerns and force people to think about the darkest possibilities of
climate change.

“The research that’s contemplated at the present is super small scale and
involves zero physical environmental risk. It’s all about the political
symbolism and the uncomfortable questions it raises,” he said.

Horton also questioned why the scientists chose to keep the project quiet
until it was in action.

“It fuels conspiracy theories. It fuels concerns there’s a set of
privileged actors doing this behind the scenes without public input,” he
said.

Wood, however, said public outreach was part of the plan and that the
project leaders had selected the Hornet in order “to support engagement
with the community and a wide array of stakeholders in a tangible way,
through direct access to the research.”

Fies said the museum had been working with the researchers on plans for
live exhibits for students. She hopes the city council will approve that
work.

“Who doesn’t want to be in the splash zone?” she said.
Evan Bush <https://www.nbcnews.com/author/evan-bush-ncpn1281465>

Evan Bush is a science reporter for NBC News. He can be reached at
[email protected].

*Source: NBC News*

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