Scientist offers better ways to engineer Earth’s climate to prevent global warming
September 8th, 2010 - 2:59 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Sep 7 (ANI): A University of Calgary climate scientist has said that there may be better ways to engineer the planet’s climate to prevent dangerous global warming than mimicking volcanoes.
“Releasing engineered nano-sized disks, or sulphuric acid in a condensable vapour above the Earth, are two novel approaches. These approaches offer advantages over simply putting sulphur dioxide gas into the atmosphere,” says David Keith, a director in the Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment and Economy and a Schulich School of Engineering professor.
Keith, a global leader in investigating this topic, says that geoengineering, or engineering the climate on a global scale, is an imperfect science.
“It cannot offset the risks that come from increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. If we don’t halt man-made CO2 emissions, no amount of climate engineering can eliminate the problems - massive emissions reductions are still necessary,” he added.
Nevertheless, Keith believes that research on geoengineering technologies, their effectiveness and environmental impacts needs to be expanded.
“I think the stakes are simply too high at this point to think that ignorance is a good policy,” he added.
Keith suggests two novel geoengineering approaches-’levitating’ engineered nano-particles, and the airborne release of sulphuric acid-in two newly published studies.
One of study was authored by Keith alone, 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.
Keith says that sulphates are blunt instruments for climate engineering. It’s very difficult to achieve the optimum distribution and size of the aerosols in the atmosphere to reflect the most solar radiation and get the maximum cooling benefit.
“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,” said Keith.
In his first study, 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.
According to Keith, the distribution of engineered nano-particles above the Earth could be more controlled and less likely to harm the planet’s protective ozone layer.
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 an aircraft would give better control of particle size.
The study says this would reflect more solar radiation back into space, while using fewer particles overall and reducing unwanted heating in the lower stratosphere.
The study included computer modelling that showed that the sulphuric acid would quickly condense in a plume, forming smaller particles that would last longer in the stratosphere and be more effective in reflecting solar radiation than the large sulphates formed from sulphur dioxide gas. (ANI)
- Venus could hold warning for Earth - Dec 01, 2010
- Sulphuric acid formation affects climate, health - Aug 09, 2012
- Deflecting solar rays could improve food supply - Jan 23, 2012
- Man-made volcanoes may cool Earth by reflecting sunlight back into space - Aug 30, 2009
- Geoengineering 'can't just slam on the brakes' on rising sea levels - Aug 24, 2010
- Simulating volcanic eruptions can save Earth from global warming - Jan 28, 2010
- 'Block the sun, control global warming' - Jan 30, 2010
- Aerosols may impact climate more than estimated - Aug 02, 2011
- Sugar-grain sized meteorites 'rocked early Earth, Mars' climates' - Apr 02, 2011
- 'Aerosols can only temporary fix global warming' - Jul 19, 2010
- Geoengineering may endanger marine life by decreasing oxygen in lakes - Feb 08, 2010
- Sea levels to rise upto 70 cm by 2100 - Aug 25, 2010
- Understanding critical nucleus in haze formation - Jun 17, 2010
- Whitening clouds could fight global warming - Jun 29, 2010
- Earth's temperature 'depends on CO2 levels in atmosphere' - Oct 15, 2010
Tags: acid aerosols, blunt instruments, calgary climate, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, climate engineering, climate scientist, co2 emissions, david keith, energy environment, geoengineering, global scale, imperfect science, novel approaches, optimum distribution, professor keith, schulich school, solar radiation, sulphates, sulphur dioxide, upper atmosphere