Public Release: 25-Jul-2017
University of Washington
The idea of geoengineering, also known as climate engineering, is very controversial. But as greenhouse gases continue to accumulate in our atmosphere, scientists are beginning to look at possible emergency measures.
A new University of Washington study looks at the idea of marine cloud brightening, which a UW group is investigating as a promising strategy to offset global warming. The strategy would spray saltwater into the air to make marine clouds reflect more incoming solar rays. Small-scale tests of marine cloud brightening would also help answer scientific questions about clouds and aerosols, two UW atmospheric scientists say in a paper published in July in the journal Earth’s Future. This dual goal for early-stage geoengineering tests would follow the U.S. National Academies of Sciences’ 2015 recommendation that any tests of geoengineering also yield a scientific benefit.
“A major, unsolved question in climate science is: How much do aerosol particles cool the planet?,” said lead author Rob Wood, a UW professor of atmospheric sciences. “A controlled test would measure the extent to which we are able to alter clouds, and test an important component of climate models.”
Other co-authors are Thomas Ackerman, a UW professor of atmospheric sciences, Philip Rasch at the Department of Energy’s Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and Kelly Wanser.
The authors are part of a group that is proposing to spray saltwater over oceans to cause a small increase in the brightness of marine clouds and boost their capacity to reflect sunlight. Doing so could be a short-term measure to offset global warming in a possible future emergency situation. In the meantime, it could also further understanding of the climate system.
One of the biggest uncertainties in climate models is the clouds, which reflect sunlight in unpredictable ways. Water droplets can only condense on airborne particles, such as smoke, salt or human pollution. When the air contains more particles the same amount of moisture can form smaller droplets, which creates whiter, brighter, more reflective clouds. Climate scientists believe pollution since the Industrial Revolution has created brighter clouds that reflect more sunlight, offsetting the warming from greenhouse gases, which trap long-wave radiation. But they can’t pin down the size of the effect or predict how much it might change in the future.
“Testing out marine cloud brightening would actually have some major benefits for addressing both questions,” Wood said. “Can we perturb the clouds in this way, and are the climate models correctly representing the relationship between clouds and aerosols?”
The proposal is now waiting on funding from government or private donors. For several years, UW researchers have been working with a group of engineers in California’s Bay Area to develop a nozzle that turns saltwater into tiny particles that could be sprayed high into the marine cloud layer. It’s the first in a series of steps needed to implement the roughly three-year plan. The researchers propose to:
- Produce a sprayer that is able to eject trillions of aerosol particles per second
- Conduct initial lab tests of the sprayer (UW research scientist Dave Covert helped conduct wind-tunnel testing of a prototype nozzle in 2015 in the Bay Area)
- Do preliminary outdoor tests in a coastal area that is fairly flat, relatively free of air pollution and prone to marine clouds (the group is currently seeking funding for proposed coastal tests in Monterey Bay)
- Move to small-scale offshore tests If tests were successful, people might someday decide whether to use a scaled-up version to create a small increase in the reflection of sunlight over large swaths of the world’s oceans.
“We’re talking about some kind of new world in terms of the ethical issues,” Ackerman said. “But for climate, we’re no longer in an era of ‘do no harm.’ We are altering the climate already. It’s now a case of ‘the lesser of two evils.'”
Ackerman will speak July 27 in Newry, Maine, at the first Gordon Research Conference on Climate Engineering about the proposed testing plan. Another speaker is the leader of a Harvard University test of an alternate proposal to spray reflective particles high in the atmosphere.
In addition to the paper on the scientific benefits of testing marine cloud brightening, a group of UW graduate students and professors published a recent paper on what specific measures might be feasible, ethical and scientifically useful for evaluating a cloud-brightening test. Authors include UW graduate students and faculty in philosophy, atmospheric science and civil engineering who were part of an interdisciplinary UW graduate course on geoengineering — among the first of its kind.
The class was taught last winter by Ackerman and Stephen Gardiner, a UW philosophy professor who wrote a book on the ethics of deliberately tinkering with the planet’s atmosphere. Ackerman has since written an essay about the teaching experience. He believes the interdisciplinary approach is the right way to proceed with geoengineering.
“There’s a science question about can we do it, but there’s also an ethical question about should we do it, and a policy question about how would we do it,” Ackerman said. “I’m an agnostic on this. I want to test geoengineering and see if it works. But the whole time we’re working on this, I think we need to still be asking ourselves: ‘Should we do it?'”
###
For more information, contact Wood at robwood2@uw.edu or 206-543-1203 and Ackerman at tpa2@uw.edu or 206-221-2767.
Disclaimer: AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert system.
Discover more from Watts Up With That?
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Just as the planet enjoys a CO2-driven upsurge in crop production along comes the dead hand of another rent seeking swampy with a bat crazy idea.
Jeez. These people need to stop helping.
“But for climate, we’re no longer in an era of ‘do no harm.’ We are altering the climate already. It’s now a case of ‘the lesser of two evils.”
Here they go, assuming facts not in evidence.
Please give an example of CO2-related human activity that is currently altering the climate. Just one would be enough.
Don’t hold your breath waiting for someone to provide an example because there are no examples. These people are blowing smoke when they claim humans are changing the climate in an obvious way.
They should just go forward. What they would discover is that clouds are heating, not cooling the planet. The bad thing is just, that first they would probably fail to procude any significant impact, and if not so, their interpretation will rather point to an accelerated global warming incidentally taking place at the same time, only pushing their efforts. So we might be heading for climate disaster after all – this time truly man made..
Ummmmm, No!
Why would we want to cool the planet.
“Water droplets can only condense on airborne particles, such as smoke, salt or human pollution.”
Not so. Water droplets will condense on electrically charged particles. This was known to particle physicists in the 1920’s – they used cloud chambers to detect charged particles. From the relevant Wikipedia article:
“A cloud chamber is a detector of ionizing radiation consisting of a sealed environment containing a supersaturated vapor of water or alcohol. An energetic charged particle (for example, an alpha or beta particle) interacts with the gaseous mixture by knocking electrons off gas molecules via electrostatic forces during collisions, resulting in a trail of ionized gas particles. The resulting ions act as condensation centers around which a mist-like trail of small droplets form if the gas mixture is at the point of condensation. These droplets are visible as a “cloud” track that persist for several seconds while the droplets fall through the vapor.”
… hence, Svensmark’s theory of cosmic ray-induced condensation as solar wind decreases, which supposedly increases the earth’s albedo.
There serious right?
Fools Rush In
A much more effective approach would be to buy thousands of 4’x8’x 1/8″ foot styrofoam boards, cover them with aluminum foil, and set them out in the ocean near the equator. Ocean albedo is about 0.06, while the aluminum would have an albedo of about 0.95 or better. It would be wicked cheap, and an excellent way to test climate models. So it will never be done.
Humankind has an absolutely abysmal record when we try to “help” the environment. It never ends well, As we head into a phase of low solar output, doing something stupid like this idea could plunge us into a new ice age. Please stop this eggheaded nonsense now.
These people should be put in jail, key thrown away and be given physics classes.
From Arctic circle perspective:
Marine salts are mostly chlorine, which is claimed to destroy the ozone layer. If it’s no longer an issue, disband UN Montreal protocol first.
The local climate should first recover enough from the last glaciation to enable vegan food cultivation and transport without fossil fuel. Currently the growing season is too short for cultivating corn.
In the meanwhile the offer, for paying more taxes to starve blind in cold, is declined.
Let’s try it. I’m sure nothing could go wrong.
This sort of idea is the source of unintended consequences. Rather than ameliorating the original problem (which isn’t one in this case), do something presumably to counteract its effects. And never stop to think of all the other things that might result from an ill-thought out idea.
Even better idea. What if we built fleets of millions of cargo ships that burned cheap fossil fuel bunker oil and released its high sulfur content in the form of sulfur dioxide, the world’s most powerful cloud brightening agent ( http://rsta.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/roypta/372/2031/20140053.full.pdf )? We could do massive geoengineering to increase the Earth’s albedo, and also conduct $12 trillion in international seaborne commerce as a side benefit. Wait, we’re already doing this? Brilliant! But the USEPA and MARPOL 2005 want us to stop — Why? Acid rain. It’s so confusing when environmentalists love and hate the same inanimate chemical element beyond all reason and sense of proportion all at the same time.
The flaw in that is that the particles wouldn’t get into the upper atmosphere where they would be needed for geoengineering..
Increasing albedo of surface and of tropospheric clouds is also proposed for geoengineering surface temperatures, and lower surface and low cloud albedo are blamed for increasing temps. That is not to say that it is not more effective to reflect solar radiation higher in the atmosphere.
And if the sarcasm wasn’t clear, I see no need for such geoengineering in the first place.
My favorite piece of geo-engineering is to paint all cars white, in order to cool off cities.
Reminds me of the Imminent Ice Age scare of the Seventies. At the time there was a serious proposal to cover all glaciers with black ash to reduce the earth’s albedo. Sometimes I think climate scares are basically about flattering us that we human beings are all-powerful.
A decade or so ago I was involved with funding and then advising on a experiment that would track pesticide spray clouds in the coastal zone. We were using what was then state of the art LIDAR. The first two attempts we could not find the pesticide cloud. Initially it was assumed that it fell quickly to the earth. But that made no sense considering the particle size we knew was there. Since the prevailing wind was from the SE crossing the Atlantic Ocean and even our peninsula before reaching our experimental site I guess that what was blocking our particles was salt spray. After a bit of literature research and droplet size analysis the LIDAR operators quickly developed a algorithm to subtract out salt spray. It worked and we found and tracked our pesticide cloud. What amazed everyone was just how much salt spray we were talking about even though the Trade Winds had been light and we were almost a hundred miles from the opposite coast. So why do we need to spray more salt spray?
Why would some humans think it is their right to “cool the planet ?
The warmer the planet the better . Antarctica case in point . Larger than the continental USA with less people in it than a Vegas casino .
People who want a cooler planet just need to move north or south and leave the rest of nature alone .
The last thing our planet needs is for some huge engineering project to try and change our temp climate our weather. Total madness.