Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Earth

Refreezing Earth's Poles: Feasible and Cheap, New Study Finds (phys.org) 177

"The poles are warming several times faster than the global average," Phys.org reminds us, "causing record smashing heatwaves that were reported earlier this year in both the Arctic and Antarctic. Melting ice and collapsing glaciers at high latitudes would accelerate sea level rise around the planet.

"Fortunately, refreezing the poles by reducing incoming sunlight would be both feasible and remarkably cheap, according to new research published Friday in Environmental Research Communications." Scientists laid out a possible future program whereby high-flying jets would spray microscopic aerosol particles into the atmosphere at latitudes of 60 degrees north and south — roughly Anchorage and the southern tip of Patagonia. If injected at a height of 43,000 feet (above airliner cruising altitudes), these aerosols would slowly drift poleward, slightly shading the surface beneath. "There is widespread and sensible trepidation about deploying aerosols to cool the planet," notes lead author Wake Smith, "but if the risk/benefit equation were to pay off anywhere, it would be at the poles."

Particle injections would be performed seasonally in the long days of the local spring and early summer. The same fleet of jets could service both hemispheres, ferrying to the opposite pole with the change of seasons.

newly designed high-altitude tankers would prove much more efficient. A fleet of roughly 125 such tankers could loft a payload sufficient to cool the regions poleward of 60 degreesN/S by 2 degreesC per year, which would return them close to their pre-industrial average temperatures. Costs are estimated at $11 billion annually — less than one-third the cost of cooling the entire planet by the same 2 degreesC magnitude and a tiny fraction of the cost of reaching net zero emissions.

Smith calls the idea "game-changing" (while also warning it's "not a substitute for decarbonization").
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Refreezing Earth's Poles: Feasible and Cheap, New Study Finds

Comments Filter:
  • Treating symptoms? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Mr0bvious ( 968303 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @10:20PM (#62893441)

    Not sure how well that's going to work.

    • Maybe, maybe not. Reality though is a fleet of >100 high altitude tankers would take about 20 years to deploy from approval,

      What I am curious about is the impact of an even greater temperature differential between the poles and equator.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        A greater temperature differential means a faster jet stream. The opposite of what we've been having recently. A faster jet stream will mean less intense and shorter heat waves and less flooding, because weather patterns will be less likely to get stuck in one location. Just as a slower jet stream has meant the opposite.

        This doesn't mean I think it's a good idea. It MIGHT be. It's more a desperation move than a reasonable plan, but it might be one of the pieces needed. OTOH, it's difficult to be certa

        • Unfortunately, we've ignored reasonable plans for about 40 years now, so it's only natural that desperation moves are going to start being the only moves left.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @10:46PM (#62893485)

      Arctic warming is a symptom but also a major cause of AGW as GHGs are released from the permafrost. If we continue to do nothing, it may soon be the biggest cause. We ignore it at our peril.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      It typically backfires. But it also allows giving the appearance of "doing something" and politicians that have still not understood how dire the situation is (or are evil fucks that only care about themselves) love that.

    • by fabioalcor ( 1663783 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @11:50PM (#62893619)

      It's like taking antipyretic medication to faster reduce a fever while an antibiotic treats the fever cause.
      As stated in the summary, it's not a substitute for decarbonization, but it can buy the world some time do to such decarbonization in an less hasteful way.

    • It better work, because there is no way we'll stop releasing CO2 into the atmosphere before it hits the crucial 350 ppm level [arxiv.org].

      • That paper is about reducing atmospheric CO2 to reach that level. It's currently somewhere around 420ppm.

      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        You can't interpret things that statically. The configuration of the continents has changed since the time that study refers to, so the critical concentration is probably different. I can't say whether it would be higher or lower, but different, anyway.

        One of the crucial components here is the Bering Strait. That limits/allows the flow of currents from the Pacific into the Arctic ocean. There are others on the side near Norway, Iceland, and Greenland, but the Bering Strait is narrow enough that we could

        • LOL that is a clear example of cognitive bias you displayed there. What did you do? "I disagree with this scientist, so I must find a way the scientist is wrong." What do scientists do? They say, "I agree with that scientist so I must find a way that I am wrong."

    • Geoengineering is absolutely a last, not first, resort plan. Something to do if we find ourselves looking at a full blown siberian meltoff feedback blowout (Which has the potential of turning the 2-4 degree celcius warming we are already likely to get into a 10 degree celcius existance-threatening super-catastrophe, it almost sterilized the planet last time it happened) , if the greenland sheet starts disintegrating or if that giant shelf in the antarctic starts melting.

      We just don't know what the side eff

    • by flex941 ( 521675 )
      It will probably instigate development of ingenious inventions like Snowpiercer.
  • We could capture and beam the energy somewhere else. Even better if it doesn't head back to the earth to heat up more stuff. Like if it was used to process materials in space (solar furnace?) or was stored somehow.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @10:36PM (#62893463)

      Enough space-based photovoltaics to make a difference would cost far more than the Gross-World-Product.

      Also, there is no possible orbit where PV satellites would only cool the polar regions.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      You need to think a bit about the size of the mirror/lens/whaever you're thinking of using. Imagine that you could just hold it fixed at whatever distance you choose from the earth, and then calculate how big the diversion apparatus would need to be to intercept the appropriate amount of sunlight. I think even this "well, you're assuming the impossible" simulation will demonstrate to you that this approach won't work.

      Say you have a disk 100 miles in diameter that you're holding at a fixed distance between

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @10:31PM (#62893457)

    All we need is humans trying to fix their own problems by using a magic 8-ball.

  • Pretty soon you're talking about some REAL money.

  • by PPH ( 736903 )

    It depends on why the poles are heating so rapidly. Is it due to some problem with the solar radiation balance at the poles which we don't understand yet that cause the poles to warm faster? Or is it due to more energy in weather systems carrying heat from lower latitudes to the poles. Introducing aerosols at the poles _might_ fix the first case. Not so much the second. "Might" because we don't have a good explanation for rapid polar heating other than the weather system thing.

    • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )
      AFAIK, caused by the latter plus albedo changes, but shading (changing the former) would offset it.
  • by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @11:00PM (#62893523)

    Is there a plan to remove those aerosols from the atmosphere if necessary?

  • I think it was called snowpiercer.
  • Useful bandaid (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mz721 ( 9598430 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @11:39PM (#62893599)

    Slowing Earth's warming by things like this helps reduce the feedback loops (warming tundra releases carbon, warming speeds up, etc).

    So, given the depth of the hole we are in, it is probably a good idea.

    Not so helpful for things that depend more directly on carbon content, like ocean acidification I just hope governments (etc) don't think these sorts of bandaids solve the whole problem. If they think that, they might not put in the other efforts we'll still need.

    • So, given the depth of the hole we are in, it is probably a good idea.

      Remember when banning bad hairspray supposedly fixed the ozone layer?

      I agree with your concerns regarding this blatant bandaid, but I'm sure Greed will try and convince us that the problem is somehow solved so they can get back to their regularly scheduled plundering of the planet.

  • Yet they are going to convince the world to repopulate the ice caps. SURE THING!
    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      It is about buying time. Over here, we held off the pandemic for two years until everyone was vaccinated (except a few idiots). Good result.

      So put down the "moran" sign.

      • by Joviex ( 976416 )

        It is about buying time. Over here, we held off the pandemic for two years until everyone was vaccinated (except a few idiots). Good result.

        So put down the "moran" sign.

        WOW! You can use the internet to try and slide in a "I know you...." Buy a mitt, catch a clue.

        Buying TIME is all HUMANS know how to do, instead of actually solving the problem beyond their lazy.

    • Yet they are going to convince the world to repopulate the ice caps. SURE THING!

      The difference is, to stop a pandemic you have to convince just about everyone. To implement measures being discussed to combat AGW, you only have to convince the rich people. That's an obnoxiously smaller percentage of the global population.

  • by aegl ( 1041528 ) on Sunday September 18, 2022 @11:47PM (#62893613)

    Neal's book doesn't target the poles. But otherwise this is covered in detail in Neal's book.

  • Conservative and Environmentalist go together like cheese and wine

    What do we want? Gradual change.

    When do we want it? In due course

  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @12:13AM (#62893651)

    is not only going to freeze the Poles, he's going to freeze the Germans too.

    By cutting off the fuel for this winter

  • by Snowhare ( 263311 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @12:43AM (#62893701)

    PREVENTING *all* excess warming by decarbonization would cost a few trillion dollars spread over the next couple of decades and is pretty much finished once you've done that requiring no further 'excess' investment to maintain.

    MITIGATING (only) runaway arctic warming by this method would cost at least $11 billion dollars a year - for the next several thousand years (longer than the entire history of 'modern civilization') - costing (order of) 100 trillion dollars net. And requires stable, motivated, and financially capable governments do it that entire time because if you stop you jump from '0' to '100' in less than a decade. I note NO large government in the world has existed for more than a few centuries at this point.

  • by Truth_Quark ( 219407 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @01:27AM (#62893781) Journal
    The problem with geoengineering solutions is unintended consequences.

    Sure you can cool the poles, but you're also cutting out some of the sunlight, and that is the energy input into every ecosystem on the planet, that's not near a deep ocean hydrothermal vent.

    And it's already pretty tricky to eke out an existence near the poles.
  • by PinkyGigglebrain ( 730753 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @02:11AM (#62893847)

    How much extra CO2 will that fleet of 125 tankers add to the atmosphere in the Arctic zones and contribute to the problem they are supposed to help with?

    The real danger of this kind of geo-engineering is that it can end up messing with the Earths natural response to the increased temperatures. The more Humanity tries to control things the more we might end up causing the fluctuation to become even more extreme eventually causing the system to completely collapse.

  • by Wizardess ( 888790 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @02:39AM (#62893903)

    by Dr. Jerry Pournelle, Larry Niven, and Michael Flynn

    Need I say more?
    {^_^}

  • [Nixon's head]... thus solving the problem once and for all!

    [tiny girl] ... but ...

    [Nixon's head] ONCE AND FOR ALL!

    • Not sure if parent should be modded insightful, informative or funny.

      Agent K.: "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it."

      To that, you can add "politicians are even dumber than people because they can't be objective about anything that may negatively affect their career in any way."

  • What would these aerosols actually do? Would they actually reflect heat back into space, or would they simply "block" it from reaching the poles? If the aerosols are not reflecting heat, I would imagine they would be absorbing it? That sounds like it may cool the poles while correspondingly warming the atmosphere above. What would be the implications of that?
  • by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Monday September 19, 2022 @03:44AM (#62894043)

    While the poles are cold, the polar seas are teeming with life - a food chain, where the bottom of the food chain consists of plankton that depend on sunlight.
    Blocking the sunlight in summer months would be detrimental to polar life.

    • Blocking the sunlight in summer months would be detrimental to polar life.

      I don't think the sky will actually go dark. As far as I know, the aerosols reflect infrared, but let through visible light, so life should go on as normal, while reducing the temperature. With volcanic eruptions, which also cause a cooling effect, a great deal more than SO2 goes into the atmosphere, e.g. smoke and dust, and the sky does go dark, so killing plant life if it lasts too long.

  • ... to address climate change. You can convince frightened people to do anything. Having spent decades fomenting the fear of climate change the profiteers and 'snake-oil' peddlers are poised to make a tidy profit. What more damage will be done implementing bizarre and ill-informed (or plain stupid) "solutions" to the problem of climate change? What if people just accepted that just as climate change didn't happen overnight neither will its solution. And by the way, the long term solution is to stop our

  • At best it will work as intended, and people will burn more fuel to make up the difference.
  • ...to create the worlds in Snow Piercer and The Matrix!

    (Amazing no one else has mentioned this?!?)

  • I have seen this movie before?

  • The countries near the poles will profit from higher temperatures. So why should they allow these flights? The gains of lower temperatures will be far away from the poles.
    This is recipe for a war.
    • In the next episode: will Canada team up with Alaska and Vermont to fight the United States of Mexico? Tune in next week for the conclusion!

  • Nothing could possibly go wrong. Our what-if models are provably, highly accurate and they are all in complete agreement with one other. There are no doubts about The Science, here. We ARE Science. We have proved our ability to predict climate change and its impacts for many decades now, and all of our predictions have come true, exactly when we said they would. The technical solution we are proposing has been thoroughly and exhaustively tested and we know it will work exactly as intended. The people who wi

  • Let's dick with the entire planet
    What could possibly go wrong?

So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of money? -- Ayn Rand

Working...