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Geoengineering: Scientists Debate Risks Of Sun-Blocking And Other Climate Tweaks To Fight Warming

Geoengineering Sun Blocking

By CHARLES J. HANLEY   04/ 3/11 08:21 AM ET   AP

CHICHELEY, England -- To the quiet green solitude of an English country estate they retreated, to think the unthinkable.

Scientists of earth, sea and sky, scholars of law, politics and philosophy: In three intense days cloistered behind Chicheley Hall's old brick walls, four dozen thinkers pondered the planet's fate as it grows warmer, weighed the idea of reflecting the sun to cool the atmosphere and debated the question of who would make the decision to interfere with nature to try to save the planet.

The unknown risks of "geoengineering" – in this case, tweaking Earth's climate by dimming the skies – left many uneasy.

"If we could experiment with the atmosphere and literally play God, it's very tempting to a scientist," said Kenyan earth scientist Richard Odingo. "But I worry."

Arrayed against that worry is the worry that global warming – in 20 years? 50 years? – may abruptly upend the world we know, by melting much of Greenland into the sea, by shifting India's life-giving monsoon, by killing off marine life.

If climate engineering research isn't done now, climatologists say, the world will face grim choices in an emergency. "If we don't understand the implications and we reach a crisis point and deploy geoengineering with only a modicum of information, we really will be playing Russian roulette," said Steven Hamburg, a U.S. Environmental Defense Fund scientist.

The question's urgency has grown as nations have failed, in years of talks, to agree on a binding long-term deal to rein in their carbon dioxide and other greenhouse-gas emissions blamed for global warming. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the U.N.-sponsored science network, foresees temperatures rising as much as 6.4 degrees Celsius (11.5 degrees Fahrenheit) by 2100, swelling the seas and disrupting the climate patterns that nurtured human civilization.

Science committees of the British Parliament and the U.S. Congress urged their governments last year to look at immediately undertaking climate engineering research – to have a "Plan B" ready, as the British panel put it, in case the diplomatic logjam persists.

Britain's national science academy, the Royal Society, subsequently organized the Chicheley Hall conference with Hamburg's EDF and the association of developing-world science academies. From six continents, they invited a blue-ribbon cross-section of atmospheric physicists, oceanographers, geochemists, environmentalists, international lawyers, psychologists, policy experts and others, to discuss how the world should oversee such unprecedented – and unsettling – research.

An Associated Press reporter was invited to sit in on their discussions, generally off the record, as they met in large and small groups in plush wood-paneled rooms, in conference halls, or outdoors among the manicured trees and formal gardens of this 300-year-old Royal Society property 40 miles (64 kilometers) northwest of London, a secluded spot where Britain's Special Operations Executive trained for secret missions in World War II.

Provoking and parrying each other over questions never before raised in human history, the conferees were sensitive to how the outside world might react.

"There's the `slippery slope' view that as soon as you start to do this research, you say it's OK to think about things you shouldn't be thinking about," said Steve Rayner, co-director of Oxford University's geoengineering program. Many geoengineering techniques they have thought about look either impractical or ineffective.

Painting rooftops white to reflect the sun's heat is a feeble gesture. Blanketing deserts with a reflective material is logistically challenging and a likely environmental threat. Launching giant mirrors into space orbit is exorbitantly expensive.

On the other hand, fertilizing the ocean with iron to grow CO2-eating plankton has shown some workability, and Massachusetts' prestigious Woods Hole research center is planning the biggest such experiment. Marine clouds are another route: Scientists at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research in Colorado are designing a test of brightening ocean clouds with sea-salt particles to reflect the sun.

Those techniques are necessarily limited in scale, however, and unable to alter planet-wide warming. Only one idea has emerged with that potential.

"By most accounts, the leading contender is stratospheric aerosol particles," said climatologist John Shepherd of Britain's Southampton University.

The particles would be sun-reflecting sulfates spewed into the lower stratosphere from aircraft, balloons or other devices – much like the sulfur dioxide emitted by the eruption of the Philippines' Mount Pinatubo in 1991, estimated to have cooled the world by 0.5 degrees C (0.9 degrees F) for a year or so.

Engineers from the University of Bristol, England, plan to test the feasibility of feeding sulfates into the atmosphere via a kilometers-long (miles-long) hose attached to a tethered balloon.

Shepherd and others stressed that any sun-blocking "SRM" technique – for solar radiation management – would have to be accompanied by sharp reductions in carbon dioxide emissions on the ground and some form of carbon dioxide removal, preferably via a chemical-mechanical process not yet perfected, to suck the gas out of the air and neutralize it.

Otherwise, they point out, the stratospheric sulfate layer would have to be built up indefinitely, to counter the growing greenhouse effect of accumulating carbon dioxide. And if that SRM operation shut down for any reason, temperatures on Earth would shoot upward.

The technique has other downsides: The sulfates would likely damage the ozone layer shielding Earth from damaging ultraviolet rays; they don't stop atmospheric carbon dioxide from acidifying the oceans; and sudden cooling of the Earth would itself alter climate patterns in unknown ways.

"These scenarios create winners and losers," said Shepherd, lead author of a pivotal 2009 Royal Society study of geoengineering. "Who is going to decide?"

Many here worried that someone, some group, some government would decide on its own to conduct large-scale atmospheric experiments, raising global concerns – and resentment if it's the U.S. that acts, since it has done the least among industrial nations to cut greenhouse emissions. They fear some in America might push for going straight to "Plan B," rather than doing the hard work of emissions reductions.

In addition, "one of the challenges is identifying intentions, one of which could be offensive military use," said Indian development specialist Arunabha Ghosh.

Experts point out, for example, that cloud experimentation or localized solar "dimming" could – intentionally or unintentionally – cause droughts or floods in neighboring areas, arousing suspicions and international disputes.

"In some plausible but unfortunate future you could have shooting wars between your country and mine over proposals on what to do on climate change,' said the University of Michigan's Ted Parson, an environmental policy expert.

The conferees worried, too, that a "geoengineering industrial complex" might emerge, pushing to profit from deployment of its technology. And Australian economist-ethicist Clive Hamilton saw other go-it-alone threats – "cowboys" and "scientific heroes."

"I'm queasy about some billionaire with a messiah complex having a major role in geoengineering research," Hamilton said.

All discussions led to the central theme of how to oversee research.

Many environmentalists categorically oppose intentional fiddling with Earth's atmosphere, or at least insist that such important decisions rest in the hands of the U.N., since every nation on Earth has a stake in the skies above.

But at the meeting in March, Chicheley Hall experts largely assumed that a coalition of scientifically capable nations, led by the U.S. and Britain, would arise to organize "sunshade" or other engineering research, perhaps inviting China, India, Brazil and others to join in a G20-style "club" of major powers.

Then, the conferees said, an independent panel of experts would have to be formed to review the risks of proposed experiments, and give go-aheads – for research, not deployment, which would be a step awaiting fateful debates down the road.

Like Isaac Newton and Charles Darwin, John Shepherd is a fellow of the venerable Royal Society, but one facing a world those scientific pioneers could not have imagined.

"I am not enthusiastic about these ideas," Shepherd told his Chicheley Hall colleagues. But like many here he felt the world has no choice but to investigate. "You would have a risk-risk calculation to make."

Some are also making a political calculation.

If research shows the stratospheric pollutants would reverse global warming, unhappy people "would realize the alternative to reducing emissions is blocking out the sun," Hamilton observed. "We might never see blue sky again."

If, on the other hand, the results are negative, or the risks too high, and global warming's impact becomes increasingly obvious, people will see "you have no Plan B," said EDF's Hamburg – no alternative to slashing use of fossil fuels.

Either way, popular support should grow for cutting emissions.

At least that's the hope. But hope wasn't the order of the day in Chicheley Hall as Shepherd wrapped up his briefing and a troubled Odingo silenced the room.

"We have a lot of thinking to do," the Kenyan told the others. "I don't know how many of us can sleep well tonight."

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CHICHELEY, England -- To the quiet green solitude of an English country estate they retreated, to think the unthinkable. Scientists of earth, sea and sky, scholars of law, politics and philosophy: In...
CHICHELEY, England -- To the quiet green solitude of an English country estate they retreated, to think the unthinkable. Scientists of earth, sea and sky, scholars of law, politics and philosophy: In...
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08:27 PM on 05/10/2011
Wow, how cool would it be if Halliburton, Bechtel or GE controlled the sun? No chance for abuse of power there, no siree, Clem.
Nor would there be the slightest chance that some other power, such as Russia, China, Japan or Britain, might have an incentive to try to destroy any sun-blocking apparatus they didn't control. Course not; they worship America's rich lifestyle, exemplary democracy and high moral standards.
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eaarth2
“An era ends when its illusions are exhausted
06:21 AM on 04/21/2011
Actually, right now, some of GHG warming has been slowed by aerosols in the atmosphere- those aerosols have delayed warming somewhat- the trouble is overtime, sulfur aerosols which form sort of a 'parasol' over the earth will decline. At the same time C02 continues to rise- a sort of 'Faustian Bargain' that once it ends could see raid and drastic warming a few years down the road.
12:14 AM on 04/14/2011
With "Gentlemen! Start Your Engines" as the starting chant at the INDY 500, millions became infected with a belief that access to "Mobility" was their human right. And proceeded to fight wars and commit mass murder to ensure that "they" get the oil so necessary to that belief, and to hell with all others.

Unfortunately, a "Runaway GreenHouse Heating" situation has arrived and the fighting for the rest of the oil shall see the world waste BILLIONS of barrels of oil and accelerate the overheating of our atmosphere.

And few, very few, will wake in time to remember calls from a few individuals challenging all others to "Wake and start thinking!" and accept that we MUST STOP what we are doing, and learn how to live without recourse to fossil fuels.

Gentlemen, its time to "Stop Your Engines!"

Daniel J. Lavigne
http://www.StopYourEngines.com
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Chance Noffsinger
12:21 PM on 04/19/2011
Except that "Runaway Greenhouse Heating" is actually impossible, but I'm sure you already knew that.
09:25 PM on 04/13/2011
Nanotechnology could be the answer - small devices could be distributed in the atmosphere that would locally sense the conditions (temperature, pressure, humidity...) and alter its reflectivity and transmission to adjust the amount of sunlight reflected/transmitted and thereby affect the surface temperature.

The devices would need to be very small, very numerous, built from innocuous materials, and of course biodegradable... No problem!
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06:22 PM on 04/13/2011
This is likely the most idiotic headline and article I've ever read. Thank you for sharing your stupidity scientists. Green things would not grow = no more oxygen = no more humans. Good idea!
http://www.americannationalco.com
06:46 PM on 04/13/2011
Vlad the Impaler was notorius for executing the bearer of bad tidings. The concept of geoengineering has been around for a long time. Scientists aren't the ones that decide to implement it. They have also provided a comprehensive list of the ramifications. And, they are the first to report that there are still possible unforeseen consequences. That may be a foreign concept to some, such as yourself.
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pita143
Virtue mine honour
10:51 AM on 04/13/2011
Okay, I guess some of these people never learned basic science. The world depends on sunlight to grow.....remember photosynthesis? How about this idea....STOP CUTTING DOWN ALL THE TREES. Trees turn CO2 into O2.......we have been cutting off our own oxygen supply when he repeatedly cut down so many trees. If we would find alternatives to using so many trees, or cutting down trees by people in the Rain forests to grow food on plots that can only be used for 2 years or so, MAYBE we would have enough trees to fight the increase CO2 levels.
rdk70816
Yellowhammer
06:03 PM on 04/11/2011
Canada and Alaska need more of that sunshine. Snow and ice are not good. Snow and ice imperil everything we do. Those in the northeast are praying for some good old warming. I know people who are opening bottles of carbon dioxide to help end the long winter.
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JaxReader
Hear reason, or she'll make you feel her.
04:02 PM on 04/11/2011
This needs to be tackled head on instead of coming up with highly risky and expensive solutions which we really do not know the consequences of.

What we do know:

Carbon Dioxide levels are increasing, oxygen is decreasing meaning the source of hte carbon dioxide is man made.

With a combination of Solar, Wind, Geo-thermal, and bio-fuel we can achieve energy independence and decrease carbon dioxide emissions reducing the warming effect. Currently we are living like parasites.

Parasites eventually kill their host, or their host ends up extinguishing them. Personally, I think it will be the latter, although it is completely unnecessary. Unfortunately, despite the potential of our intellect, we are still dumb animals controlled by our superstitions and avarice.

Perhaps this is why civilization continues to rise and fall. When will we truly evolve?
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RunningBecky
Runner, nurse, chess player
11:43 AM on 04/11/2011
This reminds me of medical care a lot. I'm a nurse and this is the routine process. When something abnormal develops, instead of treating the cause (because often we really can't) we give the patient some treatment such as drugs to relieve the symptoms. Then the drugs create their own man-made symptoms so we have to do something to treat those and you get this massive cascading effect.
Blocking out the sun is like prescribing a highly toxic medication to aleve a problem we are creating! How are plants to thrive without photosynthesis? Etc. etc. It would disrupt all kinds of patterns including our water evaporation-condensation (etc) patterns. I'm afraid the cure would be worse then the disease. Maybe we need to find the guts to solve this problem at it's source! Hugs Becky
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JaxReader
Hear reason, or she'll make you feel her.
04:02 PM on 04/11/2011
Exactly, very well said, F&F
06:46 PM on 04/10/2011
plants don't need heat for photosynthesis, they need the quantum inertia at a rate of various light frequencies. What would we do for plant life if we blocked out the sun? Grow plants indoors creating more greenhouse gasses from burning coal?
10:58 AM on 04/10/2011
Supposed scientists with a God complex. I think I'll leave it up to God. He's got a much better track record than any of these bought off clowns.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
12:26 PM on 04/10/2011
The great thing about saying something so stu//pid is that you aren't aware of how stu//pid it is. Unfortunately, everyone else is.
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JaxReader
Hear reason, or she'll make you feel her.
03:54 PM on 04/11/2011
Sounds just like the trial of Galileo. Damn heretics.
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Chris 1
11:10 AM on 04/08/2011
Different day, new stupidity from eco-fringe.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
07:40 PM on 04/08/2011
Coming from you, that is quite a leap. What are your degrees again? I've only asked you three times, told you what mine were in, only to have you accuse me of not doing so.

J'accuse.
09:05 AM on 04/08/2011
Many here worried that someone, some group, some government would decide on its own to conduct large-scale atmospheric experiments, raising global concerns.

To late already been happening for years!!!!!

http://youtu.be/WpxC7usUfm0
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Twenty Row Kid
Be yourself: everyone else is taken.
04:13 PM on 04/07/2011
We've done such a great job with the earth, let's start screwing with the sun.
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REMEMBER2050
Bring on that War on Women, GOP! I'm game.
04:17 AM on 04/08/2011
I have been glancing at this column's posts for a couple of days, and I'm wondering if a lot of bloggers aren't seeing the magnitude of what this article is about. This isn't about screwing with the sun because we're too lazy to put in pv cells and wind turbines, and we're too cheap to all buy Priuses.

Geoenginee­ring is a very serious science: a science of the last resort. You use geoenginee­ering like blocking out the sun when, and only when, our climate is at such a tipping point that only the most extreme and onerous measures will have any hope of saving us. This is Plan B. The final plan. You better believe it needs to be a good one, because we have no Plan A. Why? Because we live in the only country in the world with a "debate" on climate change--and one split on political lines. The rest of the world just believes in science, which is simpler.

What you should really be getting from this article is a sense of activism. Our government needs a real energy policy that changes our current energy sources. We all need to be screaming that if it comes down to changing our energy sources like sane people or doing this, we're going to go with sane.

God help us all if we ever get to Plan B. Scientists and engineers can run all the models they want, but we have never geoenginee­red anything on this incomprehe­nsible planetary scale.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
07:42 PM on 04/08/2011
It is more about illiteracy, or unwillingness to read, unfortunately. That, and a very misleading headline and graphic.
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jimboy71
Hen Diapheron Heautoi
07:41 PM on 04/08/2011
Try reading.
09:46 PM on 04/10/2011
Try thinking Jimbo, you missed 20's point.