COOL(ING) TECHNOLOGY

Geoengineering schemes shouldn’t be dismissed out of hand, scientists say 9

 Geoengineering schemesA visual overview of geoengineering schemes.Image: Kathleen Smith/LLNL

LONDON - Sci-fi proposals to cool the planet are laden with risk but may be Earth’s only hope if politicians fail to tackle global warming, scientists said on Tuesday in their biggest evaluation to date of “geoengineering” concepts.

The verdict by Britain’s prestigious Royal Society came a little more than three months before a U.N. showdown in Copenhagen on how to reduce the carbon emissions that drive climate change.

John Shepherd, a professor at Britain’s University of Southampton, who chaired a 12-member panel which assessed the evidence, said geoengineering was filling a perilous political void.

“Our research found that some geoengineering techniques could have serious unintended and detrimental effects on many people and ecosystems—yet we are still failing to take the only action that will prevent us from having to rely on them,” he said.

The report cautiously said some geoengineering schemes were technically feasible but were shadowed by safety worries and doubts about affordability.  Provided these questions were answered, such projects could be a useful tool as part of a worldwide switch to a low-carbon economy, it said.

But, the report warned, other geoengineering schemes are so costly or so freighted with risk and unknowns that they should only be considered a last-ditch fix.

Just five years ago, geoengineering was widely dismissed by mainstream climate scientists as quirky or delusional. As recently as 2007, the U.N.‘s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) cautioned of its potential risk and unquantified cost.

But the schemes are now getting a serious hearing in many quarters, helped by mounting evidence that climate change is advancing faster than thought while progress toward a carbon-curbing U.N. treaty is moving at glacial speed.

Supporters say geoengineering can buy time to let politicians hammer out a deal or wean the global economy off polluting fossil fuels.

The report, “Geoengineering the climate: Science, governance and uncertainty,” was based mainly on peer-reviewed literature.  It took a year to carry out, and the Royal Society came under fire from green groups that accused it of handing a cloak of respectability to a once-mocked scientific fringe.

The authors of the report said geoengineering fell into two main categories.

The most promising entails removal of carbon dioxide, such as by planting forests and building towers that would capture CO2 from the air.

Some of these projects could be harnessed alongside conventional methods to reduce emissions once they are demonstrated to be “safe, effective, sustainable, and affordable,” said the report.

The other category is called solar radiation management.

Instead of tackling CO2, it would act like a thermostat, turning down the heat that reaches Earth from the sun.

Concepts in this field include deflecting the sun’s heat away from the Earth through space mirrors, scattering light-colored particles in the high atmosphere to reflect the solar rays, and using ships to spray water that would create reflective low-altitude clouds.

The advantage would be to lower temperatures quickly and could be tempting if global warming suddenly cranked up a gear, the report said.

But these techniques would not curb CO2 emissions that cause dangerous ocean acidification; their costs are unclear but possibly astronomical; and they may end up generating disasters of their own.

Even so, they should not be dismissed out of hand, given their potential in an emergency, said Ken Caldeira, a professor of climate modelling at Stanford University, California.

“We need to think if Greenland were to be sliding into the sea rapidly, causing rapid sea-level rise, or if methane started to de-gas rapidly from the Siberian permafrost, or if rainfall patterns were to shift in such a way that wide-spread famines were induced,” he said.  “We would be remiss if we did not do what we could do to understand the potential of these options as well as their uncertainties and risks ahead of time.”

Painting roofs white to reflect solar rays—an idea gaining ground in California and other sunny places—would provide only limited, local cooling and not affect the rise in global temperature.

“None of the geoengineering technologies so far suggested is a magic bullet and all have risks and uncertainties associated with them,” Shepherd said.

The panel called for funding of around $162 million a year to kickstart research into whether geoengineering schemes could be feasible—and, if so, in what circumstances they should be applied and how they would be managed.

Here is a snapshot of the report’s views on the main geoengineering proposals: 

Carbon-Removal Projects

These are schemes that remove carbon dioxide (CO2), the principal greenhouse gas, from the atmosphere. Projects that are shown to be “safe, effective, sustainable and affordable” should be deployed alongside cleaner energy and other conventional methods to reduce carbon emissions. Among those highlighted in the report:  

Planting trees
Afforestation would suck carbon dioxide (CO2) out of the atmosphere through the natural process of photosynthesis.
For: Safe, easy, swift, and cheap to deploy, good for biodiversity.
Against: Only limited potential for carbon removal, potential conflicts over land use (forests vs. food crops).

Bio-energy
Use trees, shrubs, and other vegetation as an energy source, such as bio-mass and charcoal.
• For: Affordable and safe.
Against: Slow to reduce global temperatures, potential conflicts over land use.

Enhanced weathering
CO2 is removed from the atmosphere over thousands of years by a natural process involving the weathering, or dissolution, of carbonate and silicate soils. Enhanced weathering would accelerate the process by adding silicates to certain soils.
• For: High potential for storing CO2 in the soil.
• Against: Expensive, slow to take effect, and impact on soil acidity and vegetation unclear.

Carbon scrubbers
Build hi-tech towers around the world to capture CO2 molecules from the air.
• For: Safe, technically feasible, and very high cleanup potential.
• Against: Costs unknown but likely to be high, need for infrastructure to store the carbon collected by the towers.

Ocean fertilization
Sow the open seas with iron nutrients to encourage the growth of marine plants called phytoplankton that suck up CO2 at the surface through photosynthesis. The phytoplankton die and sink to the ocean floor, effectively storing the carbon forever.
• For: Technically feasible, not too expensive.
• Against: May not work, given complex ocean currents; slow to reduce global temperatures; very high potential for damaging the marine ecosystem.

Oceanic upwelling
Place huge vertical pipes in the sea to pump water from the depths to the surface and from the surface to the depths.
• For: Would boost the efficiency of the ocean as a means of storing CO2.
• Against: Unfeasible, would only reduce atmospheric CO2 by a tiny fraction, environmental impact unknown.

Solar-Radiation Management

These are schemes that would cool the planet by reducing heat from the sun rather than by curbing fossil-fuel pollution.  Some of these could have a quick cooling effect, but would not address CO2 buildup, which causes ocean acidification and other problems.  They may also have a potential for causing massive environmental problems.  As a result, solar radiation management is less preferable than carbon dioxide removal, says the report. It should only be applied in an emergency and for a limited time, and in any case should accompany reductions in carbon emissions.  The principal schemes:
  
Albedo (reflective materials)
Cover desert areas with reflecting film or generate white clouds over parts of the oceans through spray generators aboard “cloud ships.”
• For: Quick to implement and rapidly effective.
• Against: Desert albedo would have a major impact on desert ecosystems, ocean albedo could affect weather patterns and ocean currents. Both very expensive.

Stratospheric aerosols
Mimicking the dust spewed from volcanoes, these would be fine, white particles of sulphate that would be scattered into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight.
• For: Technically feasible, highly effective (could start to reduce temperatures within one year), can be deployed quickly and at low cost.
• Against: Possible impact on ozone layer, high-altitude clouds, may disrupt regional rainfall patterns.

Space sunshade
Place reflectors in orbit that would reduce the amount of solar radiation reaching Earth by 1 or 2 percent.
• For: Highly effective, and no theoretical limit on potential cooling.
• Against: Would take decades to deploy; huge cost; potential effects on regional climate; impact of reduced sunlight on ecosystem unknown.

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  1. Ken Johnson's avatar

    Ken Johnson Posted 9:01 pm
    03 Sep 2009

    Re "Space sunshade"Dumb Question: How much would it cost to put a 1 km^2 sunshade in space?2nd Dumb Question: How much would it cost to make 1 km^2 of white ping-pong balls and dump them in the ocean? 
  2. Royal Enfield's avatar

    Royal Enfield Posted 10:57 pm
    03 Sep 2009

    Doesn’t it finally feel like we live in the future?  This just seems so Sci-Fi. But let’s be real about it, geoengineering is going to happen, just like globalization did.  We just need to think through how to do it best with the least amount of damage.  For example, China didn’t sit out on globalization because we greens didn’t like it.  And, they are certainly not going to sit by and let climate change destroy their country without taking measures within their power to try and stop it.  Neither is the US, EU, Japan, nor any nation with the means.  It just takes one sovereign that sees the writing on the wall to send a cloud of sulfur in the upper atmosphere.  It’s cheap, it can be done right now, and the stakes are way, way too high. A good climate policy will include aggressive GHG mitigation, smart planning for adaptation, and some serious research put into geo-engineering followed by the most sophisticated use of the technology coordinated amongst nations much like a global mitigation agreement. I’m very glad to see this being discussed, and I hope they get more money than just $162M per year for research.  This is something we have to face now.  I realized about 2 years ago that we were watching the beginnings of many tipping points.  See the findings of the International Polar Year.  Check out the methane deposits in the Artic Sea ice starting to become unstable.  Look at the melting permafrost.  Check out the sea level rising 2x what the worst case scenario models from IPCC predicted.  We are living in the worst case scenario right now.  Welcome to the gates of hell. Oh, but let’s pretend it’s not too late and we can finally get it together.  Obama can regulate GHGs through the EPA – nevermind the parade of lawsuits that will have to be hashed out while the glaciers melt.  Or maybe the bill gets past the Senate intact.  All we have to do is wait till Fox News gets their next drooling idiot in office and away we go!  All that our beloved climate bill tries to accomplish will be undone by the next business puppet of a president through bad policy tying the hands of the administrative agencies charged with implementing the climate bill. But, let’s keep pretending – Let’s say the Obamas get to stay in office till 2050 – Michelle in 2016, and the kids to follow.  But what about the international piece of the equation?  Look at what’s going on – we’re not going to get another Kyoto in Copenhagen.  We might get some sort of agreement, but most experts now agree that the chances of a full fledged treaty are nil to forget about it.  And all the while China and India are growing like drunken Americans.  And we’re not doing so bad either, when we’re not in a recession.  But let’s pretend we get that treaty.  What about corruption?  What about deforestation?  What about the myriad of enforcement issues around the globe?  What about wars that unseat governments that ratified the treaty?  What about all of those multinational corporations who have breaking the law as part of their business model? Let’s not allow the primordial instinct to only deal with things in our faces to doom us again.  It’s the reason we all got in this CO2 mess to begin with.  And, if we don’t learn from our mistakes (so human) we will ignore this golden opportunity to learn everything we can about geoengineering right now while we can do it with time on our side.   Think of it like the third leg of a policy stool: mitigation, adaptation, engineering.  If we don’t use it – we’ll land flat on our backs.  Perhaps with more terrible unintended consequences than all the dire predictions for catastrophic climate change.
  3. amazingdrx Posted 11:20 pm
    03 Sep 2009

    Does the rejuvenation of soil as a carbon sequestration mechanism constitute geo-engineering?  If it were acomplished globally with a wholesale shift from chemical ag to organic fertilizer from waste stream biomass it could be, and actually would remove enough GHG to equal other geo-engineering schemes.  Consider the elimination of nitrous oxide (300x the GHG effect of cO2) from chemical fertilizer and the reduction of methane (20x the GHG effect of CO2) emissions from chemical fertilizer run off bio-reacting with cellulosic biomass in soil and wetlands.Natural prairie soil stores 1.8 tons of CO2 per acre per year.  Going organic with ag soil and restoring conservation land to its former sequestration rate might do it, actually reverse global climate change.And the biogas produced through waste biomass digestion and organic fertilizer production could backup a 100% renewable grid, while offsetting 20 times the CO2 from the biogas energy production.Overlooking the possibility of using wind/wave powered low cloud formation for not only reflectivity, but also  for rain and snowfall increase in strategic areas like glaciers, tundra, deserts, and ice caps, is a striking omission.  Think of deserts flooded with rainfall and greenery, turning all that CO2 into soil carbon sequestration potential via a huge increase in photosynthesis.  And consider the artic summer, with 24 hour sunlight, with an extra thick ice cap, tundra, and glacial cover of snow from low cloud formation during frigid winter.  That's huge reflectivity during the hottest solar absorption season in the most delicate climate for ice melt and feedback methane release.The total potential is huge, and fuel less with wind/wave powered floating "ships" that can be directed to take advantage of weather paterns to maximize these effects of rain/snow fall.I would rather see renewable energy backed by organic ag and biomass recycling as a fix, but if we are too late, the low cloud solution seems feasible and the lesser of geo-engineering evils.I've got to point out though that mother nature most l;ikely will use geo-engineering as drought and ice melt sets in.  Land is rising in alaska as glaciers melt and the countervailing force of the weight of ice is removed and magma pressue pushes relentlessly upwards.  There are signs that volcanic activity will ocurr due to the loss of aqifers in drought and glacial mass.  Yellowstone's hot springs and geysers cool the rock capping the magma bubble, and the weight of the water hold the cap down.When/if aquifer water evaporates from the area and is not replenished by rainfall will the supervolcano erupt?  Will that cause years (as in 1816) or deacdes with no summer, thus cooling the planet into a mini ice age?
  4. solar greg Posted 1:23 pm
    04 Sep 2009

    Nothing gets investors moving more than a good business. How about setting up land rental in tropical countries for sustainable logging operations. There is enough land owned by individuals without money that just sit there, baren after they sold the rainforest. Instead of letting them plant Jathropa or other biofuel destined plantations, offer to pay for the rental of the land and have them plant trees. The operation could be monitored by the investors via Google Earth. In tropical areas trees are ready to cut in 5 to 10 years. It would be in the best interest of the land owner to take good care of the forest or he doesn't get paid for the lumber.Trees are the best carbon capture machine.I like the idea of creating snow in places where there should be anyways. Also create cloud cover over the bald spot up north.  
  5. bailsout Posted 10:35 pm
    05 Sep 2009

    Does geoengineering do any more than rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic if you don't change the direction of population growth?  When do humans stop being the sacred cow? Maybe, when we are all barbecued in the pit of our own making. Geoengineering may help slow the big ship, but if you don't make an effort to change its direction, it is still going to collide....
  6. A Spencer's avatar

    A Spencer Posted 7:14 pm
    06 Sep 2009

    We should not put a single dime into geoengineering projects. There are too many unknowns, and we cannot accurately gauge the consequences. I wrote an email to none other than Bill McKibben recently about this, asking him what exactly it entailed and if it presented a viable option at all. Here's his blunt, yet thoughful response:
    "geoengineering comes in many flavors--aerosols in the stratosphere, a
    fertilized ocean to encourage plankton growth and hence co2 absorption,
    giant mirrors in space. they all seem both expensive and fraught with
    potential risk, and we used to dismiss them all as crazy. they still
    are, but the planet is in such tough shape (from our ongoing co2
    geogengineering project) that serious scientists are spending more time
    thinking aobut them, at least as a backup project. but in any event,
    they require that we also stop pouring more carbon into the atmosphere"What we really need is investment in education, so that young people can become informed and active, and not repeat the mistakes of previous generations. We need campaign finance reform DESPERATELY, in order to get real leaders in positions of power -- leaders who have the people and ethics in mind, not those who contribute the most to keeping their sorry butts in office. This, of course, in addition to robust action on climate change both on a governmental level and a more local level, down to every last citizen. People need to be aware of just how big a threat we're facing here...
  7. Sam Ripley Posted 4:36 pm
    07 Sep 2009

    I must say, I am actually not against geoengineering as an idea. The reality is that we engage in all sorts of projects that engineer local and broad scale geology, we just don't think of them as geoengineering. Minor scale projects like digging a tunnel? It would be great if earth process had left a cavern we could travel through already, but what are the chances! So we dig and blast and drill our way through rock accumulated over millions of years. Irrigating vast expanses of normally arid land by pumping water from deep underground or from far away so that we can grow food? Again, I consider this geoengineering. What really begins to sepperate our everyday "normal" activities from the sci-fi style geoengineering ideas is a sense of purpose. We dig tunnels to get from point A from point B. We irrigate so we can grow food. Great. Generally speaking netiher of these are done with resource efficiency or ecological consequence in mind, but yeah there is SOME purpose other than to change the landscape for the hell of it. Oh and lets not forget mankind's greatest accidental geoengineering project- anthropogenically accelerated climate change! Sorry, couldn't resist. On with my point.Geoengineering as envisioned in this article is done for the exact purpose of creating environments more akin to the average temperatures/hydrologies/etc. of the last couple millenia. Maybe even further back. Empires have risen and fallen because of available water resources and other environmental issue, irregardless of their shady politics, corruption, or conquest from without. So yeah, probably not a bad idea to try and stabilize things. Here's my two problems with geoengineering. First, appreciation of temporal scale. Any "solution" to "fix" global warming will require a lot of time. Lets say political favoritism for geo projects runs too hot, and all of a sudden a bunch of suits with great hair are trying to ram aerosols into the atmosphere, themselves not actually understanding the concept of ecological stability. Inject too much sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, and now not only are the oceans still acidic from CO2, its now too cold to grow food in zones that were previously warming. Just a thought. It probably wouldn't be all so simple of a catastrophe.Second, internalization of cost and responsibility is nowhere to be found in a fair number of people who embrace geoengineering. Why stop driving my car when some scientist can just turn CO2 into lemony fresh clean air! (wait...can they!?) The whole idea of geoengineering as it is often conceived is a lot like choosing to go to the ER four times a year instead of limiting your risk and engaging in healthy habits. Yes, they will patch you up for a cost, but you are still creating the problems that send you to a hospital in the first place. Even if by some ridiculously improbable wizardry we are able to "solve" global warming, what then? Has anyone actually learned anything? Do we still externalize our hedonism onto the global poor? Yeah, probably we do. Because we never earned salvation. I'm not saying I'd stand in the way of geoengineering system that could put us back on target for a healthy planet, frankly I'd throw all morals out the window to stop the kind of suffering likely to occur over the next few centuries, but I don't have to worry about that because no one has come close to proposing anything viable. 
  8. Sam Ripley Posted 4:37 pm
    07 Sep 2009

    I must say, I am actually not against geoengineering as an idea. The reality is that we engage in all sorts of projects that engineer local and broad scale geology, we just don't think of them as geoengineering. Minor scale projects like digging a tunnel? It would be great if earth process had left a cavern we could travel through already, but what are the chances! So we dig and blast and drill our way through rock accumulated over millions of years. Irrigating vast expanses of normally arid land by pumping water from deep underground or from far away so that we can grow food? Again, I consider this geoengineering. What really begins to sepperate our everyday "normal" activities from the sci-fi style geoengineering ideas is a sense of purpose. We dig tunnels to get from point A from point B. We irrigate so we can grow food. Great. Generally speaking netiher of these are done with resource efficiency or ecological consequence in mind, but yeah there is SOME purpose other than to change the landscape for the hell of it. Oh and lets not forget mankind's greatest accidental geoengineering project- anthropogenically accelerated climate change! Sorry, couldn't resist. On with my point.Geoengineering as envisioned in this article is done for the exact purpose of creating environments more akin to the average temperatures/hydrologies/etc. of the last couple millenia. Maybe even further back. Empires have risen and fallen because of available water resources and other environmental issue, irregardless of their shady politics, corruption, or conquest from without. So yeah, probably not a bad idea to try and stabilize things. Here's my two problems with geoengineering. First, appreciation of temporal scale. Any "solution" to "fix" global warming will require a lot of time. Lets say political favoritism for geo projects runs too hot, and all of a sudden a bunch of suits with great hair are trying to ram aerosols into the atmosphere, themselves not actually understanding the concept of ecological stability. Inject too much sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, and now not only are the oceans still acidic from CO2, its now too cold to grow food in zones that were previously warming. Just a thought. It probably wouldn't be all so simple of a catastrophe.Second, internalization of cost and responsibility is nowhere to be found in a fair number of people who embrace geoengineering. Why stop driving my car when some scientist can just turn CO2 into lemony fresh clean air! (wait...can they!?) The whole idea of geoengineering as it is often conceived is a lot like choosing to go to the ER four times a year instead of limiting your risk and engaging in healthy habits. Yes, they will patch you up for a cost, but you are still creating the problems that send you to a hospital in the first place. Even if by some ridiculously improbable wizardry we are able to "solve" global warming, what then? Has anyone actually learned anything? Do we still externalize our hedonism onto the global poor? Yeah, probably we do. Because we never earned salvation. I'm not saying I'd stand in the way of geoengineering system that could put us back on target for a healthy planet, frankly I'd throw all morals out the window to stop the kind of suffering likely to occur over the next few centuries, but I don't have to worry about that because no one has come close to proposing anything viable. 
  9. Sam Ripley Posted 4:38 pm
    07 Sep 2009

     I must say, I am actually not against geoengineering as an idea. The reality is that we engage in all sorts of projects that engineer local and broad scale geology, we just don't think of them as geoengineering. Minor scale projects like digging a tunnel? It would be great if earth process had left a cavern we could travel through already, but what are the chances! So we dig and blast and drill our way through rock accumulated over millions of years. Irrigating vast expanses of normally arid land by pumping water from deep underground or from far away so that we can grow food? Again, I consider this geoengineering. What really begins to sepperate our everyday "normal" activities from the sci-fi style geoengineering ideas is a sense of purpose. We dig tunnels to get from point A from point B. We irrigate so we can grow food. Great. Generally speaking netiher of these are done with resource efficiency or ecological consequence in mind, but yeah there is SOME purpose other than to change the landscape for the hell of it. Oh and lets not forget mankind's greatest accidental geoengineering project- anthropogenically accelerated climate change! Sorry, couldn't resist. On with my point.Geoengineering as envisioned in this article is done for the exact purpose of creating environments more akin to the average temperatures/hydrologies/etc. of the last couple millenia. Maybe even further back. Empires have risen and fallen because of available water resources and other environmental issue, irregardless of their shady politics, corruption, or conquest from without. So yeah, probably not a bad idea to try and stabilize things. Here's my two problems with geoengineering. First, appreciation of temporal scale. Any "solution" to "fix" global warming will require a lot of time. Lets say political favoritism for geo projects runs too hot, and all of a sudden a bunch of suits with great hair are trying to ram aerosols into the atmosphere, themselves not actually understanding the concept of ecological stability. Inject too much sulphur dioxide into the atmosphere, and now not only are the oceans still acidic from CO2, its now too cold to grow food in zones that were previously warming. Just a thought. It probably wouldn't be all so simple of a catastrophe.Second, internalization of cost and responsibility is nowhere to be found in a fair number of people who embrace geoengineering. Why stop driving my car when some scientist can just turn CO2 into lemony fresh clean air! (wait...can they!?) The whole idea of geoengineering as it is often conceived is a lot like choosing to go to the ER four times a year instead of limiting your risk and engaging in healthy habits. Yes, they will patch you up for a cost, but you are still creating the problems that send you to a hospital in the first place. Even if by some ridiculously improbable wizardry we are able to "solve" global warming, what then? Has anyone actually learned anything? Do we still externalize our hedonism onto the global poor? Yeah, probably we do. Because we never earned salvation. I'm not saying I'd stand in the way of geoengineering system that could put us back on target for a healthy planet, frankly I'd throw all morals out the window to stop the kind of suffering likely to occur over the next few centuries, but I don't have to worry about that because no one has come close to proposing anything viable.  

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