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Earth Science

Group Seeks Test For Geoengineering Tool To Fight Climate Change 127

An anonymous reader writes: A group of retired engineers and scientists has been meeting for several years to develop techniques to fight climate change. They've now reached the point where they want to actively test a machine that shoots water droplets into the sky in order to supplement existing clouds and increase the planet's albedo. The group is not aiming for full deployment — in fact, it's not even unanimous in support for prevailing theories in climate science. But they all agree that it's important to learn about such technologies before the situation becomes a crisis. "We need to understand whether this approach is even possible and what the risks are, in the event that we find ourselves looking for ways to extend time and mitigate warming damage."

If we're eventually forced to deploy large-scale geoengineering projects to combat climate change, it's not a good idea to grab whatever technology is cheapest or most readily available without knowing how well it works. The group is aware of the ethical concerns surrounding such research, but its director notes, "The fact is humanity is already engaged in unplanned climate engineering. We're doing it through coal plant and shipping emissions every day without understanding it very well."
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Group Seeks Test For Geoengineering Tool To Fight Climate Change

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  • We should give control over this to the same government that suspected Ray Bradbury novels of being intended to cause mass communistic hysteria.
    • Re:Same agencies. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Penguinisto ( 415985 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @11:57AM (#50380567) Journal

      Nobody is asking for governmental control... they're asking to perform an experiment. Geez.

      In all seriousness, I like that they're just looking at the technology, and studiously avoiding any attempt to take a political side in any of this. There are practical applications for this in the macro sense that have approximately bupkis to do with the whole debate, after all.

      • by rs79 ( 71822 )

        " actively test a machine that shoots water droplets into the sky"

        This is what trees do. Maybe if we hadn't removed half the world's trees in the last 100 years maybe carbon wouldn't have gone wonky. Just a thought.

        Curiously, Beck 2008 shows Co2 40 ppm higher than now. 200 years ago.

        SMH

  • If carbon emissions were suddenly and miraculously reduced overnight, it would still be too late to reverse the warming trend. So we either need to accept and live with warming, or geoengineer.

    The debate has now officially moved on. Please do not rehash the past, or find an excuse to parrot your SJW whinings.

  • by allcoolnameswheretak ( 1102727 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:06PM (#50380635)

    Plants... they consume CO2, which seems to be the big issue in climate change.

    How about projects to plant more plants in cities globally? Like forcing coal-powered power plants to surround their plant with plants? Plan to plant more plants in your plants.

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      If you say the word "plant" a few more times, and add in a couple other buzzwords like "sustainable" and "holistic", you're sure to get funding!

      • by njnnja ( 2833511 )

        I think it's a play on this meme [knowyourmeme.com]. Like, I heard you like power plants (e.g. a coal firing electricity factory) so I put some powerful plants (e.g. CO2 absorbing members of kingdom Plantae) in your power plant (e.g. coal firing electricity factory) so you can power (verb) your plant (noun) while you plant (verb) plants (noun).

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      And when the plants die the CO2 is released. You only hold the CO2 for a while in a plant unless it gets buried in special circumstances or someone comes by and turns a tree into a house.

      • And then other plants grow to replace the dead ones.

        The more plants (especially trees) you have growing on the planet, the more CO2 is sequestered.

        • So then you are going to be using up more and more land to sequester carbon temporarily for the CO2 that we continue to emit and for the plants that die. There is a limit to the amount of land that we can use for this.

          • Make houses. Make paper (& bury it in a landfill--what happened to those readable 1950's newspapers anyway?). Heck, bury it in a coal mine for that matter. You don't have to let it decompose.
    • Plants... they consume CO2, which seems to be the big issue in climate change.

      How about projects to plant more plants in cities globally? Like forcing coal-powered power plants to surround their plant with plants? Plan to plant more plants in your plants.

      Plants can help but considering that we're daily burning an amount of fossil fuels equivalent to centuries or millennia of plant growth accumulation it can't fix the problem in any relevant time span.

    • by Xyrus ( 755017 )

      Plants... they consume CO2, which seems to be the big issue in climate change.

      How about projects to plant more plants in cities globally? Like forcing coal-powered power plants to surround their plant with plants? Plan to plant more plants in your plants.

      *facepalm*

      That will jack shit because you and others like you have absolutely no concept of scale. If you completely covered every square meter of earth the densest fast growing trees, you wouldn't even come close to counteracting a single year's worth of carbon emissions. And I don't mean just the land. I mean even square meter of surface area. We're burning through the equivalent of hundreds of thousands of years worth of ancient global forests, grasslands, etc. every year. No amount of greenery is going

  • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:07PM (#50380639) Homepage

    * Does absolutely nothing to prevent ocean acidification
    * Provides only masking - if they ever stop (lack of funding, discovery of profound negative consequences, or whatever), all the warming that they've been hiding comes rushing back
    * They're just as likely to increase temperatures by increasing IR reflectance as they are to decrease it by increasing albedo. The least well understood aspect of the planet's climate, by a large margin, is clouds; they make up the vast majority of the error bars in the IPCC projections.
    * There's a whole raft of staggeringly huge potential downstream disruptions, many of which could increase the problem - for example, reduction of photosynthesis.

    I'm actually a moderate to slightly pro-geoengineering. But this is one of the dumbest geoengineering ideas out there. No, I don't think it's worth even wasting the money to try, that money should go to other more worthwhile projects.

    • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:39PM (#50380949) Journal

      * Does absolutely nothing to prevent ocean acidification

      The fact that one technology doesn't address all the problems doesn't make it worthless.

      * Provides only masking - if they ever stop (lack of funding, discovery of profound negative consequences, or whatever), all the warming that they've been hiding comes rushing back

      Nonsense. Decreasing insolation doesn't "hide" warming, it reduces energy input into the system. Sure, when you stop blocking the energy you'll begin warming again, but the energy you reflected away will not come "rushing back". Vacuuming my floor only keeps the floor clean as long as I continue doing it regularly, and when I stop the dust and dirt will begin to accumulate -- but the crud I removed is gone and not coming back.

      Artificially and temporarily boosting the albedo isn't a permanent solution -- but there is no permanent solution. The climate is not stable even without geoengineering, intentional or unintentional. If we want it to remain comfortable for us, we're eventually going to have to take a hand in it, and any technique we use is going to be temporary in nature. Actually, I'd argue that's a feature, not a bug; less chance of a runaway effect.

      * They're just as likely to increase temperatures by increasing IR reflectance as they are to decrease it by increasing albedo. The least well understood aspect of the planet's climate, by a large margin, is clouds; they make up the vast majority of the error bars in the IPCC projections.

      That just increases the value of studying it.

      * There's a whole raft of staggeringly huge potential downstream disruptions, many of which could increase the problem - for example, reduction of photosynthesis.

      Again, that just means we need to study it rather than guess. You can acquire scientific knowledge through careful passive observation or through active experimentation but the latter is much faster and more effective.

      I'm actually a moderate to slightly pro-geoengineering. But this is one of the dumbest geoengineering ideas out there. No, I don't think it's worth even wasting the money to try, that money should go to other more worthwhile projects.

      That's an argument I could buy. However, I don't see anyone else actually proposing to do anything. What we should be doing is funding many different areas of research. More promising avenues should get more funding, but we shouldn't dismiss anything that is potentially useful out of hand.

      • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @01:02PM (#50381221) Homepage

        The fact that one technology doesn't address all the problems doesn't make it worthless.

        When its alternatives do address acidification, yes, that is an argument against it.

        Nonsense. Decreasing insolation doesn't "hide" warming, it reduces energy input into the system. Sure, when you stop blocking the energy you'll begin warming again, but the energy you reflected away will not come "rushing back".

        Wrong. Earth is at 400ppm milestone, and we're doing on artificial albedo increases. We'll call this status X. Now let's say we begin this process tomorrow. Earth's CO2 keeps rising... 450... 500... 550... 600. But we keep increasing the albedo so that the temperature stays the same as it is today.

        What happens when the machines get shut off?

        Water vapor has a very short atmospheric residence time. Everything will be back to its no-albedo-boosted state within a couple weeks. So all of the sudden we go from 400ppm temperatures to 600ppm temperatures. There will be some delay because of thermal inertia of course, but the issue is, you're just hiding the problem, not actually doing anything about it. And when you stop hiding it, it comes running back.

        Again, that just means we need to study it rather than guess.

        Every dollar spent on one thing is a dollar not spent on something else. There are geoengineering processes which don't have all of these problems and are more worthy of study, and need more study (I'd put forth, as one example among many, ocean seeding). And that money could also go toward advancing the technology to reduce carbon emissions or capture emitted carbon.

        However, I don't see anyone else actually proposing to do anything.

        That's just advertising how little you follow this topic.

        • by r0kk3rz ( 825106 )

          The whole water vapor thing has the nice effect that it should be reasonably reversable, and if it works might buy us a little time.

          Time to do what? That seems to be reasonably straight forward at this point, the problem is the political will and the costs involved.

          • Step 1. Build Gen 3+ PWR Reactors to replace all coal power stations currently in service. These are commercial designs that can be built today on a technology that we have 50+ years experience with in a commercial capacity, not some pie-in-the-
          • You don't want to put water VAPOUR into the air you idiot -- that's one of the worst GHGs there is!

            This stupid plan is to put water droplets into the atmosphere.

          • If additional water vapor only makes clouds then global warming is _not a problem at all_. CO2 isn't a big greenhouse gas, the only way it's a problem is if CO2 raises the temperature a tiny bit, which puts a higher equilibrium amount of water into the atmosphere, which is a serious green house gas.

            If the water vapors effect in making more clouds outweighs it's green house gas effect, then CO2 induced global warming is no problem.

  • he said albedo
  • I am going to seek funding to paint the poles black.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:12PM (#50380699)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by chilenexus ( 2660641 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:27PM (#50380827)
      Being too late to stop changes from happening is not a good reason to stop efforts to limit how bad it gets. That's like saying "I'm already going to hit the car in front of me, so why use my brakes before impact?"

      Well, it could spell the difference between a dented bumper and slaughtering everyone in both cars.
  • We don't know who struck first, us or them. But we do know it was us that scorched the sky. At the time, they were dependent on solar power. It was believed they would be unable to survive without an energy source as abundant as the sun.

  • Let's put a bunch of salt water into the sky where it will probably fall down on land as rain. Granted it will be a very small amount but if it's done a lot and only from one spot you could start impacting some crops.

    Water evaporates from the ocean leaving the salt behind (and a bunch of other things). If they are going to do this they should at least evaporate the water before sending it up even though it would require a lot of energy. I just think that tossing up a lot of salt water into the atmosphere

  • Again, we see false solutions emerging to solve this problem. The single most important contributing factor to global warming through greenhouse gas emission is animal agriculture, at 18% (vs. the entire transportation sector at 13%).The United Nations knows this (http://www.fao.org/ag/magazine/0612sp1.htm) since 2006. If you add the loss of rain forest due to yet again animal agriculture, it gets even worst. Some estimates are putting the contribution to global warming by the animal agriculture sector betw
    • Very poor citations: "Livestock systems occupy 45% of the global surface area" Really? Let's assume that they were stupid and really meant 45% of the LAND area of the globe. Even then estimates from 2000 put all agriculture usage (not just animal agriculture) at 30% of land area:
      http://www.unep.org/resourcepa... [unep.org]

      • Agreed. It does require work to find out what they base their figures on, exactly. Then trying to cross-reference with the citation you pointed to, in order to really compare apples to apples. I'll dig more when I have time ...
    • by ThosLives ( 686517 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @01:14PM (#50381349) Journal

      The big problem with addressing global warming is that the ability (and cost) associated with mitigating global warming is not located in the same places that are most likely to be adversely affected by global warming.

      Asking individuals to change their behavior (or pay a tax) for social programs even in their own backyard is hard enough, yet the climate change folks want to impose costs for people literally on the other side of the globe.

      Now I'm not saying that trying to mitigate effects of climate change isn't worthy - it's just that the way people go about trying to get people to make changes is missing the boat as far as how to convince people to make a difference goes. Instead of encouraging, educating, and unifying people, mostly what we see is almost-dictatorial decrees about "you must stop X" and is very vilifying and divisive. Even the jabs thrown between the "deniers" and "supporters" don't actually get anything done.

      Make efforts that are appealing now (both personally and economically) without vilifying people, and we'll get some traction. Saying "we're doomed, and you're evil because you don't want to change X in your life!" isn't a helpful approach.

      • I like this. "The climate change folks". Like we are not all on the same planet. Like I am in a club. In my book, there is no "climate change folks". There are just people who read the science, learn and are honest enough to say: this does not work, we need to do something. For me, there is no "almost-dictatorial" decrees. I take great care not telling people what to do. I just give my opinion (yes, with a bit of attitude, but hey, this is /.), try to supply the evidence that convinced me and state what the
      • You blame the wrong side. It's the deniers who have dragged the debate down into the mud. And it's only the deniers who are vilified by the other side.

        Remember CFCs? They were destroying the ozone layer. Yet the human race found a way to come together and stop using them. And now the ozone layer will recover.

        We can do the same to combat AGW. You do have a point that the NIMBY factor gets in the way. Finding and encouraging alternatives to carbon-heavy technologies that have a minimal impact on lifestyle wil

        • The problem that your idea has is that the 6 billion third worlders who want to be first worlders have no interest in your CO2/climate conspiracy theories and are busy burning as much coal as they can, and building new coal powered generating plants at a breakneck speed. So until you can find a way of getting them on board, your pious attempt to reduce CO2 (which frankly is mostly done by exporting manufacture to the third world) then this is all hot air.

    • LOL.
      America is not even the largest meat eating nation [insidermonkey.com]

      This is the problem with you far lefters. You scream that America is the one that is all wrong. Yet, you ignore the fact that we are not even number 1 in any of the categories that cause issues. More importantly, the difference is minimal.
      This is the same problem with CO2. Many of you, such as yourself, will scream about America's CO2 emissions, yet, ours is at 14% of the world total AND DROPPING fast. OTOH, China's is at 33% and climbing. In fact,
      • Where does the "far lefter" label come from ??? I am as capitalist as they get, and I am a fiscal conservative with a social conscience (Canadian, eh!). Ad hominem, anyone? I am actually sorry I only mentioned America specifically, I should have said most developed countries. Ironically enough, a lot of the awareness on this subject actually comes from America. And I do know developing countries is the next big problem coming. If you just read my comments, I identify the issue very clearly. The link between
    • And this link is far more interesting. [procon.org]
      In particular, it shows with REAL data, and not just guess work, that Americans consume around 110 lbs / person / year in 2009.

      IOW, all of the numbers out there from your groups are a great deal more than what we actually (produced - exports) + imports.
  • by swschrad ( 312009 ) on Monday August 24, 2015 @12:41PM (#50380967) Homepage Journal

    is silence the deluded gasbags spewing lies on behalf of dirty energy, and move ahead on alternatives on a wartime basis. between coal spew and the denial industry's hot air, that's half the problem solved.

  • Seriously, if we can do this off the western coast or in the mexican gulf, we can increase the humidity and then once over mountains, simply seed it to snow.
    Or, if we know that a cold front is incoming in one direction, simply increase the humidity in another area, so as to drop plenty of snow/rain.

    With this approach, we could increase the snowpack in the western mountains and save it in the numerous reservoirs.
    • The rain of salt on the western side of their mountains will, of course, have no unintended effects.

      • The water being added to the atmosphere is done over the oceans, not over the mountains.
        In fact, Ideally, this would be done at offshore wind platforms.
        • The liquid sea water is sprayed in the air, making salty clouds. Clouds drift over the land, and fall as rain/snow on the mountains.

          Salty snow. Nice.

          Or you could desalinate the water before spraying it, but that would cost a lot more.

  • In Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. we could absolutely see lawn sprinklers increasing rainfall on many day before they regulated lawn sprinkling. Ft. Lauderdale gets way too much rain as it is. But on certain days it was almost a joke among us to watch as we turned on our sprinklers. A few years ago we did not have grass that would do well at all with our heat and near tropical equator type of sunlight. In spring or summer the air would often turn dead still and we would swelter. If the sprinklers were not
  • There are plenty of possible impacts to this, and I'm not sure the overall result will be to cool the Earth. There are two obvious processes by which clouds can impact the temperature. Clouds can reflect solar radiation back out into space, which is a cooling effect. However, clouds can also absorb the infrared radiation emitted by the Earth. Some of that gets emitted back down to the surface, which is a warming effect.

    During the day, clouds reflect more solar radiation back out into space than they absorb

  • Climate change is happening and has happened as long at the planet has been in existence.
    I read how everyone wants something done to "fix" climate change. What is it they propose? I have not heard of any real solutions.
    They talk about reducing carbon emissions. But how to achieve that?
    Assuming we are only talking about human based carbon emissions, how do you significantly reduce the production of carbon?
    Only one comes to mind. Eliminate a significant portion of the human population. This allows
  • Remember, folks, if you're getting on an ice train with Tilda Swinton, pay for first class. [imdb.com]

  • Reducing the pressure to address our challenges probably does more harm than good. I suppose if we leave ethics out of the debate we would take measures to engineer a massively reduced population and the resultant drop in CO2. Applying ethics to this I feel like the situation must be similar to when scientists worked on the first atomic bomb. They weren't personally liable for the bomb and it was a challenging ego stroking project but a reasonable person could surmise that the "research" would be seized upo
  • The funny point is that climate crises is coming at the same time as oil peak. It means any solution to climate change should not rely on oil, and vice-versa.

    Hence, how much oil o they need to change climate?

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