Climate Craziness of the Week: Global scale nanosphere nuttiness

Let’s see, what would we make those nano-disks out of? He says (see PNAS paper below):

Silica-alumina ceramic hollow microspheres with diameters of 1 μm. (aka 1 micron)

Do you think putting nano-sized silicon based pollutants into the atmosphere will go over well?  Silicosis anyone? From this report:

The micron-sized silica dust, which is ingested through the normal breathing process, coats the inner lining of the lungs (alveoli) and forms fibrous scar tissue that reduces the lungs’ ability to extract oxygen from the air.

Respirable particles, which are less than 10 microns in diameter, are invisible to the naked eye. They travel through the respiratory system, eventually depositing themselves in the air sacs (alveoli).

I’ll give him points though for saying geoengineering is “inherently imperfect”, but I think his “cure” is worse than the “disease”. Just have a look at the material safety data sheet (MSDS) for the 3M Zeeospheres he’s proposing (see link below) and you’ll see what I mean.

From a press release at the University of Calgary.

Stopping global warming

Mt. Pinatubo is an active volcano in the Philippines frequently studied by scientists. Photo credit: Courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey
Mt. Pinatubo is an active volcano in the Philippine's frequently studied by scientists. Photo credit: Courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey.

There may be better ways to engineer the planet’s climate if needed to prevent dangerous global warming than mimicking volcanoes, a University of Calgary climate scientist says in two new studies.

Releasing engineered nano-sized disks or sulphuric acid, a condensable vapour, above the Earth are two novel approaches that offer advantages over simply putting sulphur dioxide gas into the atmosphere, says Dr. David Keith, a director in the Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy and a Schulich School of Engineering professor.

Geoengineering, or engineering the climate on a global scale, “is inherently imperfect,” says Keith, who is in the vanguard of scientists worldwide investigating the topic.

“It cannot offset the risks that come from increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,” he says. “If we don’t halt man-made CO2 emissions, no amount of climate engineering can eliminate the problems—massive emissions reductions are still necessary.”

Keith suggests two novel geoengineering approaches—‘levitating’ engineered nano-particles and the airborne release of sulphuric acid—in two newly published studies, one he solely authored and the other with scientists in Canada, the U.S. and Switzerland.

Scientists investigating geoengineering have so far looked mainly at injecting sulphur dioxide into the upper atmosphere. This approach imitates the way volcanoes create sulphuric acid aerosols, or sulphates, that will reflect solar radiation back into space—thereby cooling the planet’s surface.

One advantage of using sulphates is that scientists have some understanding of their effects in the atmosphere because of emissions from volcanoes such as Mt. Pinatubo, Keith says.

“A downside of both these new ideas is they would do something that nature has never seen before. It’s easier to think of new ideas than to understand their effectiveness and environmental risks.”

In his study in the Proceedings of the National Academic of Sciences, a top-ranked international science journal, Keith describes a new class of engineered nano-particles that might be used to offset global warming more efficiently and with fewer negative side-effects than using sulphates.

In a separate new study published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, Keith and international scientists describe another geoengineering approach that may also offer advantages over injecting sulphur dioxide gas.

Releasing sulphuric acid, or another condensable vapour, from aircraft would give better control of particle size, thereby reflecting more solar radiation back into space while using fewer particles overall and reducing unwanted heating in the lower stratosphere, they say.

=================================

I’ve located the PNAS article here:

http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2010/09/02/1009519107.full.pdf

here’s the section on “nanodisks”

The Cost of Engineered Particles. Is it possible to fabricate such particles at sufficiently low cost? Any definitive answer would, of course, require a sustained broad-based research effort. The following argument serves only to suggest that one cannot discount the possibility: Approximately 10^9 kg of engineered particles similar to the example described above would need to be deployed to offset the radiative effect of CO2 doubling.

Assuming a lifetime of 10 years, the particles must be supplied at a rate of 10^8 kg∕yr. A plausible upper bound on the acceptable cost of manufacture can be gained by noting that the monetized cost of climate impacts and similarly the cost of substantial reductions in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are both of order 1% of global gross domestic product (GDP) (28). Suppose one demanded that the annualized cost of particle manufacture be less than 1% of the cost of abating emissions, that is 10−4 of the ∼60 × 1012 global GDP.

Under these assumptions, the allowable manufacturing cost is 60∕kg. Many nanoscale particles are currently manufactured at costs significantly less than this threshold.

Silica-alumina ceramic hollow microspheres with diameters of 1 μm (e.g., 3M Zeeospheres) can be purchased in bulk at costs less than 0.3∕kg. Moreover, bulk vapor-phase deposition methods exist to produce monolayer coatings on fine particles, and there are rapid advances in self-assembly of nanostructures that might be applicable to bulk production of engineered aerosols.

10^9 kg is one billion kilograms, or 1,102,311 short tons. I don’t have figures on how much silicon dust makes it into the air globally, but 1.1 million tons of silica nanospheres seems a bit hard to come by for a process. Cost may not be the biggest issue. Deployment and potential health effects are much bigger considerations.

LINK: Material safety data sheet (MSDS) for 3M Zeeospheres (PDF)

Here’s the company website: http://www.zeeospheres.com/

Do I want these in the free air? Heck no.

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ZT
September 7, 2010 4:07 pm

Q. >What is wrong with these people?
1. Too much funding.
2. Lack of supervision.
3. Inability to solve problems.
4. Unbounded egos.

R. de Haan
September 7, 2010 4:07 pm

Extreme “events” call for extreme “measures”.
If we let these morons have their way we’re really in for some serious trouble.
Although I think that much of the “engineering” proposals serve the same purpose as all the extreme climate scare stories, namely to create a smoke curtain to hide the absolute lack of empirical evidence for AGW a.k.a Climate Change.
It is stories like this that have a devastating effect on the number of people who believe AGW/Climate Change is real.
They have heard too much of it over a too long period of time.

Ray
September 7, 2010 4:14 pm

I wonder what other unintended phenomenon could take place with such nanoparticles in the atmosphere… one can think of those as being perfect catalysts for different reactions that could transform the atmosphere permanently!!!

Stephen Brown
September 7, 2010 4:17 pm

From http://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/causdis/pneumoconiosis/
“The term “pneumoconiosis” refers to a group of lung diseases caused by the inhalation – and retention in the lungs – of dusts. The most commonly occurring types of pneumoconiosis (apart from asbestosis) are coal workers’ pneumoconiosis, arising from the inhalation of coal dust, and silicosis, arising from the inhalation of respirable crystalline silica (RCS). There is a long delay – almost invariably 10 years or more – between exposure and onset of disease and hence most new cases or deaths from pneumoconiosis reflect the working conditions of the past and a majority of cases occur in individuals who have retired. ”
I have seen miners die of pneumoconiosis. It is not pleasant. Cancer causes less agony. No-one should even think of injecting micro-particles into the atmosphere, least of all silica-alumina based poison by the mega-kilogram load.
This is tantamount to mass murder.

Karl Wiedemann
September 7, 2010 4:20 pm

Mr. Watts,
Not all forms of silica are equally implicated in silicosis. The more dangerous forms are quartz and cristobalite. Amorphous silica (i.e. non-crystalline forms, to which the nanoforms frequently belong) are considered less dangerous. Nevertheless I do not relish breathing any form of powdered material whether coal, cotton, flour, or silica. The services of a good industrial hygienist should be sought when evaluating exposure to potentially hazardous materials.
As for silica, avoiding exposure to powdery forms of silica is essentially an impossibility. It is all around us in the form of dust and sand.
The minerals that constitute our environment are exceedingly complex, and are a very rewarding and interesting field of study for those so inclined.

BravoZulu
September 7, 2010 4:22 pm

These are dangerous fools. Not only are they reacting to what are probably imaginary threats, they are creating actual threats to counter them.

Enneagram
September 7, 2010 4:26 pm

First of all: They have not syntethize anything, as this is a common trick in nanotechnology, silico-aluminate nanoparticles do exists already as natural MONTMORINOLLITE; btw, btw this is why these nanoparticles are the most popular “obtained”.
Second: When actual nanoparticles reach such small sizes, as I have obtained, and if -as expected- pure, then its EMF is very great, so they ATTRACT among them usually forming a sponge like material. See the following picture of 5-10 nm. copper nano particles as a sponge:
http://www.giurfa.com/cu_poly.jpg

Gavin
September 7, 2010 4:32 pm

Geoengineering…
We may not need to speculate about artificial attempts, at least in the short term. Keep an eye on Sinabung: http://bigthink.com/ideas/23914

rbateman
September 7, 2010 4:36 pm

What is now called silicosis of the lungs used to be called consumption.
Miners who used rock drills that had no water injection breathed silica dust from the quartz.
It’s a horrible way to die, slow suffocation as lungs scar over.
Drilling dry is outlawed, and MSHA inspectors check the dust at all the mines for compliance.
OSHA checks all other workplaces.
But, utopian think tanks want to fill the skies with it.
This then, is one of the ‘ultimate solutions’ to the problems that exist in utopian thinking.

Frank K.
September 7, 2010 4:37 pm

ZT says:
September 7, 2010 at 4:07 pm
Q. >What is wrong with these people?
1. Too much funding.
2. Lack of supervision.
3. Inability to solve problems.
4. Unbounded egos.

Thank you, ZT. That about sums it up for me…most especially, numbers (1) and (3).

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 7, 2010 4:40 pm

Jimbo said September 7, 2010 at 3:45 pm:

So, if the ‘heat’ doesn’t kill us suffocation will. This reminds me of the past medical practice of ‘bleeding’ patients.

Hey, it’s how their healing the US economy. Didn’t you notice the improvement?
I should get a T-shirt made up:
Do you feel recovered?

George E. Smith
September 7, 2010 4:43 pm

Why not just cancel all the enviro wacko dust and particulate EPA controls, and let the natural dust act to nucleate clouds.
Part of the problem is tha EPA wants the air to be cleaner than it was whent he pilgrims landed, so now there are fewer clouds because no dust is allowed to blow around.
These people are in my opinion, criminally insane; that’s just my opinion. It costs nothing at all to leave the weather the hell alone to take care of itself. Mother Gaia knows exactly what the weather should be at all times everywhere on earth; so let her take care of it.

rbateman
September 7, 2010 4:44 pm

R. de Haan says:
September 7, 2010 at 4:07 pm
Extreme “events” call for extreme “measures”.

The extreme event being the loudspeaker attached to the lips of Chicken Little, who has had his stage moment.
Pull the plug, hit the Gong and use the stage hook.
Next Global Idol contestant, please.

CPT. Charles
September 7, 2010 4:44 pm

This definitely falls into the category of ‘WHAT COULD POSSIBLY GO WRONG?’
This is beyond bat-sh*t crazy, on turbo boost.

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
September 7, 2010 4:45 pm

Arghh, that should have been “they’re” instead of “their” in my last comment!
This federally-mandated anemia must be getting to me…

INGSOC
September 7, 2010 4:49 pm

co2insanity says:
September 7, 2010 at 3:52 pm
“Hey! This is what I’d term a malthusian-eugenics dream come true. They’ll cool off the planet and kill all or most of mankind in one fell swoop. I do question if the CO2 might not dramatically increase with all of us coughing our lungs out, though.”
This is somewhat along the lines I was thinking as well. This is the main reason the Malthusians buried the warmabomber story so fast. The aim is to eliminate the “surplus” populations (Lee referred to them in more colourful terms like “filth”) without damaging their sunny vacation getaways. So the nano ninny method is a bit over the top. I rather expect some sort of invisible and odourless gas to be the final solution chosen by “them”. Zyklon B was too messy, and CO would kill all the happy little birds that lull Bonny Prince Charles to sleep in his castle. Perhaps a nasty virus that attacks only lower class individuals? A strain of bacteria that can be added to anything except Fois Gras and Arugula?
What would you do if you wanted to eliminate 95% of the population, yet not damage anything?

Dan Absher
September 7, 2010 4:51 pm

Looks worse than MTBE or ethanol, both of which were advertised to improve the air and are/were disasters.

drdrwilliams
September 7, 2010 4:54 pm

“Silica-alumina ceramic hollow microspheres with diameters of 1 μm”
Since they naturally occur in fly ash, it sounds like an argument for putting the tall stacks back on the coal-fired power plants.
Let’s see: Take $535 million in government grants, strike out “carbon sequestration” and substitute “atmospheric fly ash injection”. what could go wrong?

Gary Hladik
September 7, 2010 4:54 pm

I’m not actually worried that any of these “geoengineering” projects will ever be tried. If people become wary enough of CAGW to consider such schemes seriously, they’ll also be wary of the unknown consequences. Besides, think what a bonanza geoengineering would be for lawyers!
Me: “A-choo! Oh no, you gave me nanosphere-induced flu! Pay up!”
3M: “Uh, we haven’t launched them yet.”
Me: “OMG, they’re worse than we thought! Pay double!”

Kevin_S
September 7, 2010 4:55 pm

This reminds me of the old Bloom County comic strip in which one of the characters, Oliver Wendell Holmes, strode into his science class claiming to have solved the entire worlds’ energy issues using only two hamsters and Raisin Bran. He laid out the mathematics on the chalk board only to have the teacher inform him that hamsters were allergic to raisins. As he sits saying that the math worked, his teachers tells him that failure is hardly original. Reality can be a real bummer.

CRS, Dr.P.H.
September 7, 2010 4:56 pm

*sigh!* Geo-engineering idiots. They always seem to forget about unintended consequences….
My own favorite was the attempt at “ocean fertilization,” pumping tons of ferric sulfate into the ocean to stimulate phytoplankton growth. The theory was that the plankton would grow and sink, sequestering carbon.
Problem was, all they did was feed a whole bunch of critters! Copepods and amphipods.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7959570.stm
“Following fertilisation of a 300 sq km patch of ocean, Lohafex, too, saw a burst of algal growth. But within two weeks, the algae were being eaten by tiny creatures called copepods, which were then in turn eaten by amphipods, a larger type of crustacean.”
HAW HAW HAW!! The companies who pushed for this type of thing (Planktos comes to mind) are now history. BTW, welcome back, Anthony!!

Ian Mc Vindicated
September 7, 2010 4:56 pm

Don’t worry guys, this will never get off the ground. Sane people will intervene and put these clown ideas to bed. Talk about ridiculous….sick twisted concept.
Reminds me of a loony bin insane asylum…..the entire concept of geoengineering is just a scientific way of saying ” give me money and I will come up with inane ideas to keep myself employed .”
Ian

Gary Hladik
September 7, 2010 5:00 pm

kadaka (KD Knoebel) says (September 7, 2010 at 4:40 pm): “Hey, it’s how their healing the US economy. Didn’t you notice the improvement?”
That is perhaps the best argument against any action on the AGW “threat”: the people in charge are the same ones in charge of the national economy. Oops.

Tim
September 7, 2010 5:00 pm

It sounds ominously like eugenics to me. Chemtrails anyone?

James Sexton
September 7, 2010 5:04 pm

ZT says:
September 7, 2010 at 4:07 pm
Q. >What is wrong with these people?
1. Too much funding.
2. Lack of supervision.
3. Inability to solve problems.
4. Unbounded egos.
========================================================
addendum.
5. Poor parenting(hence the necessity of supervision)
6. Didn’t play well with others.(hence the inability to solve problems
Just here to help!