https://www.simonsfoundation.org/2024/06/12/simons-foundation-funds-14-projects-exploring-earth-cooling-techniques-as-part-of-new-international-research-program/

*12 June 2024*

The funding will support researchers in advancing our scientific
understanding of solar radiation management strategies that might help cool
the planet.
Cirrus clouds such as these can prevent heat from escaping into space.
Scientists are investigating the viability of strategies to thin such
clouds to cool the planet. Dimitry B./Flickr

International efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions may not be enough
to prevent the worst effects of climate change over the coming decades and
meet the goals set by the 2015 Paris Agreement
<https://unfccc.int/process-and-meetings/the-paris-agreement>. Indeed, the
rapid heating of the ocean over the past two years suggests that the
Earth’s temperature may rise even faster than some models predict.

“This is an all-hands-on-deck moment,” says Simons Foundation president
David Spergel. “We will likely need a wide set of tools to mitigate global
warming. While reduction in carbon emissions will be essential, recent
reports from the United Nations Environment Programme, the U.S. government,
the European Commission and the U.S. National Academy of Sciences have
recommended research on potential temporary interventions that could help
cool the planet as nations reduce their carbon emissions and develop ways
to remove existing carbon dioxide, methane and other greenhouse gases from
the atmosphere. Our goal is to support the basic science needed to
understand the risks and benefits of these potential interventions.”

With that goal in mind, the Simons Foundation and Simons Foundation
International have launched a new collaborative research program
<https://www.simonsfoundation.org/grant/solar-radiation-management/> to
advance our scientific understanding of methods that aim to cool our planet
by increasing the reflection of sunlight away from the atmosphere or by
changing the properties of clouds. These solar radiation modification
techniques could help temporarily limit climate change, but assessments of
their safety and feasibility are inhibited by large uncertainties
surrounding their effectiveness, longevity and environmental impact.

The 14 research projects funded by the new program will pursue basic
research questions underlying these uncertainties, focusing specifically on
two different solar radiation management approaches.

The first investigates particles, known as aerosols, that could be injected
into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight away from Earth — an effect
already seen in nature when volcanoes erupt, ejecting sulfate particles
into the atmosphere.

The second approach explores modifying the properties of clouds. Several
projects will investigate various methods of thinning wispy high-altitude
cirrus clouds to allow more of the planet’s heat to escape into space. One
project will focus on a different cloud type and evaluate the influence of
pollution aerosols from the shipping industry on the reflectivity of
low-lying clouds over the ocean.

“The properties of different types of aerosols are not well understood,
leading to substantial uncertainty in how they would affect our climate on
a global and regional scale,” says program consultant Emily Carter, a
professor at Princeton University and associate laboratory director at the
Department of Energy’s Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory. “The
fundamental measurements and modeling of such properties, supported by this
international collaborative, are urgently needed to increase understanding
before any such climate intervention strategy should ever be contemplated
for large-scale deployment.”

The solar radiation management science program — funded by the Simons
Foundation and Simons Foundation International and administered by the
Simons Foundation — will provide up to $10 million per year over the next
five years across all the projects.

Rajan Chakrabarty
<https://engineering.wustl.edu/faculty/Rajan-Chakrabarty.html> of
Washington University in St. Louis and his team will investigate the
optical properties of two prospective sunlight-reflecting aerosols —
calcite and aluminum oxide — and produce a database of their findings that
can be immediately implemented in new and existing climate models.

Zamin Kanji
<https://iac.ethz.ch/people-iac/person-detail.MTY3Mzgz.TGlzdC82MzcsLTE5NDE2NTk2NTg=.html>
of
ETH Zürich in Switzerland and his colleagues will use atmospheric
chemistry, physics and materials chemistry to study the formation of ice
crystals in the laboratory. Such crystals are involved in the formation of
cirrus clouds, the thinning of which can help to mitigate climate warming.

Frank Keutsch <https://chemistry.harvard.edu/people/frank-keutsch> of
Harvard University and his team will lead an effort to identify
alternatives to sulfuric acid for stratospheric aerosol injection. Sulfuric
acid is the most well-studied candidate, but its introduction could produce
negative impacts such as increased ozone depletion, acid rain and
stratospheric warming. Alternative candidates may yield similar benefits
with fewer unwanted side effects.

Jasper Kok <https://www.ioes.ucla.edu/person/jasper-kok/> of the University
of California, Los Angeles, and his colleagues will model the impacts of
winter cloud thinning in the high Arctic. The thinning of so-called
‘mixed-phase regime’ clouds could dissipate heat held near the surface and
slow the melting of sea ice with fewer side effects than other solar
radiation management techniques.

Ulrike Lohmann <https://usys.ethz.ch/en/people/profile.ulrike-lohmann.html> of
ETH Zürich will similarly model mixed-phase regime cloud thinning. Because
this form of thinning is more localized and operates over shorter
timescales than stratospheric aerosol injections, new models are needed to
properly assess its impact.

Beiping Luo
<https://usys.ethz.ch/en/people/profile.OTk5NjM=.TGlzdC82MzcsMzIwMTk3MjIy.html>
of
ETH Zürich and his team will model and experimentally study the atmospheric
processes that act on particles involved in stratospheric aerosol
injection, including new prospective candidates.

Faye McNeill <https://www.cheme.columbia.edu/faculty/faye-mcneill> of
Columbia University will use an aerosol flow tube to investigate the
breakdown products and kinetics of proposed stratospheric aerosol injection
materials at stratospheric temperatures.

Romaric Odoulami <https://acdi.uct.ac.za/contacts/dr-romaric-c-odoulami> of
the University of Cape Town in South Africa will investigate potential
alternative materials for use in stratospheric aerosol injection, including
crushed diamonds, dust, calcite and other candidates. The project will also
explore the simulated climate response for agriculture, biodiversity,
energy and water resources across Africa.

Thomas Preston <https://www.mcgill.ca/chemistry/faculty/thomas-c-preston> of
McGill University in Canada and his team will use aerosol optical tweezers
and electrodynamic traps to study individual aerosol particles, with a goal
of exploring key microphysical properties under conditions relevant to
stratospheric aerosol injection.

Timofei Sukhodolov
<https://www.simonsfoundation.org/people/timofei-sukhodolov/> of Physical
Meteorological Observatory Davos / World Radiation Center in Switzerland
will oversee an international team investigating the surface and bulk
chemistry processes associated with alternative stratospheric aerosol
injection candidates. This information will inform models on whether such
aerosols have fewer side effects than traditional sulfates, including ozone
depletion and lower stratospheric heating.

Simone Tilmes <https://staff.ucar.edu/users/tilmes> of the National Center
for Atmospheric Research and her team will study the impacts of alternative
stratospheric aerosol injection candidates on atmospheric composition,
ozone degradation, ice cloud formation and climate feedbacks. Their
findings will be integrated into existing models.

Gabriel Vecchi <https://vecchi.princeton.edu/people/gabriel-vecchi> of
Princeton University and his team will model a novel solar radiation
management strategy that directly targets the greenhouse effect by changing
temperatures in the stratosphere, and compare their results with
traditional strategies such as stratospheric aerosol injection.

Paul Wennberg <https://www.eas.caltech.edu/people/wennberg> of the
California Institute of Technology and his team will investigate the
effects of recent legislation limiting sulfur emissions produced by
international shipping. The group will track recent ship emissions using
airborne observations and study the changing chemical composition of ship
emissions to quantify the impact of these changes on global cloudiness and
radiative forcing.

Robert Wood <https://environment.uw.edu/faculty/robert-wood/> of the
University of Washington and his colleagues will study how turbulence
changes injected plumes over time. This information will strengthen
existing models of plume evolution and strengthen estimates of both the
cooling magnitude and the side effects of stratospheric aerosol injection.
*Source: Simons Foundation*

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