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Solution to Global Warming or . . . ?

r-j said:
That is exactly what I was thinking about. A wealthy mad scientist (or well funded terrorist country maybe) could destroy the world by freezing most of us to death.
That's not the real problem--Venus, for example, shows that even heavy cloud cover can suport hot environments (heat is an energy budget issue, meaning that energy out is as important as energy in when doing the calculations). The real problem is that the majority of life on Earth functions within ecosystems based on photosynthesis. Solar radiation is the very foundation of the food web, and reductions in solar radiation will have profound impacts on the biosphere--and these impacts are demonstrable. I know it's demonstrable, because I've helped demonstrate some of it. Each trophic level has 10% the biomass of the lower ones, roughly (for oceans, remember that this is over a given period of time--phytoplancton are notorious for reproducing like mad, and getting eaten extremely fast, so there's the appearance of paucity in the oceans if you just take a grab sample). How many trophic levels can we support if we reduce solar radiation by 10%?

The K/Pg boundary was hotter than any rational environmentalist proposes will happen with current warming (I'm not counting the completely bat-crap crazies, the ones that think we'll light the world on fire and whatnot). The impact actually had a net warming trend (though, before anyone jumps on this, the planet didn't get nearly as hot as it had been--thermohaline circulation was still functional, for example). It's not the temperature that caused one of the two most dramatic mass extinctions in history, but simply blocking the light.

macdoc said:
ummm we've been doing that for a while and that's a way over the top statement without qualification.
Please read my entire comment. You'll find that I was talking about the fossil record--something that I think you'll agree counts as a qualification.

To put the current warming in perspective it's the thermal equivalent of 1 Hiroshima bomb a second being added to the air/ice water of the planet.
Have you done the comparison with OIS 11? If not, the statement is actually quite meaningless.

More generally, the Earth HAS warmed before. It's often been much, much hotter than today--and in fact is NORMALLY hotter (Zachos et al., 2001 is the data you'll need to argue against to convince me otherwise, by the way). Large temperature excursions both ways have occurred. Without an understanding of how life on Earth reacted to those temperature changes you can't state with any confidence what will happen. I can show you places in the fossil record where temperature increases caused a lot of problems, and others (such as the Eocene Climate Optimum) where it actually seemed to help the biosphere.

Saying we should study the impact is all well and good but bottom line we are already well down a dangerous path for both the land biome and ocean biome with surface warming and acidification.
You want to attempt to fix a sitiuation you acknowledge is dangerous without even trying to learn the system? Ask a bomb squad guy what would happen if they acted in such a reckless manner. And it IS reckless--various attempts at altering climate have been attempted and, due to a lack of understanding of what's going on, they resulted in untold ecological devistation. Now people are proposing to muck about with the foundations of the majority of the biosphere. If you don't think that requires some serious and sober reflection, as well as intense analysis of what could happen, I frankly don't want you anywhere NEAR this thing. This is more dangerous than every nuclear bomb going off at the same time--and I can say this with absolute confidence, because the last time such a thing happened on the scales necessary to impact global temperature it WAS worse.

And if you know more than the marine scientists that signed the Monaco Declaration outlining the high risk to the ocean I'd be mightily impressed.
I probably don't know more in general. But I'd be very surprised if any of them knew as much about mass extinctions as me. They study modern oceans; I study mass extinctions.

Besides, who knows more is irrelevant--this is nothing more than an ad hom attack to dismiss my arguments without addressing them. Zachos et al. 2001 is fairly easy to track down. The K/Pg data is as well. Let's address the data, shall we? I've done far too much research to be intimidated by someone saying they're an expert--I've proven experts wrong on a number of occasions. Most commonly, they've stepped outside the limits of their field of expertise. And frankly, figuring out how the biosphere reacts to environmental perturbations is a question for paleontology--the science that actually studies exactly that. (Well, paleoecology if you want to get specific.)

Cooling by way of brightening - either via cloudships or micro-bubbles are low regional impact and very scaleable.
Regional impacts can still be devistating. Which regions do you want to impact? What will the reaction to the biosphere be? Best-case scenario, in terms of impact to the biosphere, would be to put these at the poles, since they're already devoid of most photosynthetic life--but they're also shiny, so they're out. You can try to put it over the oceans, but then you've got to very carefully assess where the phytoplankton are, which is extremely tricky. You also run into the problems of how marine life will react. Land is right out; even over deserts there's simply nowhere you can cut solar radiation by enough to impact temperature without causes devistation. There's also farmland on land--and I'm frankly not brave enough to tell farmers I'm going to cut their sunlight.

Geo engineering with space mirrors is stupid costly and with aerosols just stupid period.
The whole idea of reflecting sunlight is stupid, period. When something causes an event that leaves a record for 65,4000,000 years it's a bad idea to do it again.
 
The whole idea of reflecting sunlight is stupid, period. When something causes an event that leaves a record for 65,4000,000 years it's a bad idea to do it again.
I don't understand some of what you are talking about, but it's all very educational. (I'm looking at Wikipedia to try and catch up)

And the point about consequences seem very important. Messing with sunlight seems a very big move, which is what started my thinking about somebody doing it on purpose to cause a disaster. I remember reading about WWII and plans to destroy German agriculture by blocking out their sunlight. And also back in the seventies when things were discussed to stop the cold, like spreading soot on the ice. Caution was urged because of the possibility of unbalancing things by trying to fix them.

It makes one think.
 
Sorry Dinwar you are arguing from questionable authority - your own - and in my view at this point have none is THIS area. I bided my time but your pompous attitude resulting in do nothing is just wrong headed in the extreme

Grind your extinction axe all you want elsewhere. It's getting tiresome in climate change.

I dare say that group of marine scientists know MUCH more and acknowledge the risks - the take way from you is "do nothing".

If you have something beyond that take away to contribute to the topic by all means let's hear it

The topic is Solution to Global Warming....

•••
r-j

We mess with sunlight all the time and every time a volcano goes off it "messes with sunlight " as does a jet contrail or your firing up your lawnmower.

China and India are messing with sunlight hugely

Giant_Brown_Cloud_Storm_over_Asia_(NASA).jpg

wiki image

as the first world did for 3 centuries or so.

It's a empty phrase. A small reduction in the incoming radiation - just as happens with a volcano or an industrial complex - reduces the warming by a small amount.

It can be engineered in a scaleable way and buys some extra time.
Introducing aerosols like S02 as a part of a solution - now that you have every right to be concerned about.
 
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To put the current warming in perspective it's the thermal equivalent of 1 Hiroshima bomb a second being added to the air/ice water of the planet. .
No averaged out over 1961-2011 it was closer to 2 hiroshima per second
http://www.skepticalscience.com/Breaking_News_The_Earth_is_Warming_Still_A_LOT.html
Have you done the comparison with OIS 11? If not, the statement is actually quite meaningless.

What is OIS 11? Did you mean MIS 11, the warm interglacial period 400k ybp?

The whole idea of reflecting sunlight is stupid, period.

Agreed, IMO the only geo engineering type solution that might work without any nasty side effects would be some sort of carbon capture
 
Wow - thanks for that correction on Hiroshima's. I still recall being astounded at the energies needed just to melt the Greenland cu kms.

•••

The whole idea of reflecting sunlight is stupid, period.

I can't see your objection to cloud ships or micro-bubbles. We already unintentionally reflect a lot of sunlight in various areas and we are reducing the reflected sunlight dramatically in the Arctic as the amount of ice cover shrinks.

Why the objection to building the albedo back up a bit?? :confused:
 
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Even if it can balance the planet's energy budget it'll cut down on photosynthesis which will continue to change the climate in unpredictable ways, and lower food production whilst giving politicians and industry an excuse not to lower carbon emissions, thus lowering the ph of the oceans.
 
The way things are going I suspect that something like this is inevitable: it's the only cheap solution to climate change, the only solution that doesn't require overcoming major political obstacles, the only solution that can be implimented and effective over a short time span.

That is the scary part. (it it is true)

For 5 billion dollars it would be possible to lower the global temperature by two degrees? What if somebody didn't turn it off at that point. How long would it take to send the whole planet into a glacier phase?
 
That is the scary part. (it it is true)

For 5 billion dollars it would be possible to lower the global temperature by two degrees? What if somebody didn't turn it off at that point. How long would it take to send the whole planet into a glacier phase?

The highlighted sentence simply won't happen, so there's not much reason to discuss it or worry about it
 
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Even if it can balance the planet's energy budget it'll cut down on photosynthesis which will continue to change the climate in unpredictable ways, and lower food production

Not sure you quite understand the concept here - what is proposed is a localized albedo change.
Aerosols in geo-engineering will be global and I think it's an awful idea.
Ice caps are not global - they are local as would cloudships and micro-bubbles be.
If anything the micro-bubbles may be a strong stimulant locally to the biome.
We already are altering the incoming radiation over some of the most fertile regions on earth and if anything the Arctic biome is becoming more vibrant despite it's negative connotations for the rest of the planet.

Increasing the albedo in relatively sterile regions of the oceans would have little or no impact on photosynthesis tho it might alter some of the rainfail patterns.

The tropical south Pacific is much like every other tropical ocean region in that it has very clear, blue water. The water appears blue due to the fact that that the ocean absorbs all wavelengths of light very well, except for the short wavelengths of blue. The other, longer wavelengths, like reds, oranges, and yellows are absorbed by the water.
The fact that tropical oceans are clear means that they are lacking in suspended sediment and plankton. This is in contrast to the popular misconception that tropical waters are very high in biological productivity. In fact, they are nearly sterile seas when compared with the cooler, plankton-rich temperate ocean regions, like the North Pacific.
http://www.oceanicresearch.org/education/films/BSPspt.html

and this is the exact area that would benefit from whitening so to reduce the absorbed incoming radiation.
The albedo is already being modified in a major and uncontrolled way over southeast Asia and in the Arctic that is negative in most regards and I don't see you all gnarly about that.
Yet when there is an opportunity to use the same physics to alter it in a way that benefits the climate and slows the warming you say no way.:boggled:

whilst giving politicians and industry an excuse not to lower carbon emissions, thus lowering the ph of the oceans
irrelevant point - that's a policy challenge not a physics issue.
 
Quote:
whilst giving politicians and industry an excuse not to lower carbon emissions, thus lowering the ph of the oceans

irrelevant point - that's a policy challenge not a physics issue.

not at all irrelevant, the main point of these geo-engineering projects is that they are seen as alternatives to cutting CO2 emissions

from the "cloud ships" article
The Copenhagen Consensus Centre, which advises governments on how to spend aid money, examined the various plans and found the cloud ships to be the most cost-effective.

They would cost $9 billion (£5.3 billion) to test and launch within 25 years, compared to the $250 billion that the world’s leading nations are considering spending each year to cut CO2 emissions, and the $395 trillion it would cost to launch mirrors into space.

the Copenhagen Consensus Centre was founded by well known climate "skeptic" Bjorn Lomborg.

I'd never heard of the microbubble idea until you mentioned it, although it still seems to be very much a hypothetical idea, from your link
There are still some drawbacks to the scheme. In order for the microbubbles to be effective, they have to last long enough to spread over large areas of water. As of yet, Seitz hasn't tested the microbubbles for their long-lasting abilities.

it then goes on to say
Still, any new geoengineering schemes should be welcomed--they might just be our biggest hope in the quest to stop climate change.

maybe I've just become too cynical in my old age but I think what they really mean is -
Still, any new geoengineering schemes should be welcomed--they might just be our biggest hope in the quest to stop serious moves to reduce CO2 emissions.

I found an article where a chemical engineer talks about all the technical problems with microbubbles and proposes an alternative, painting the ocean white with microscopic latex particles, I'm not sure if it's an elaborate parody or a serious suggestion.
http://bravenewclimate.com/2011/10/08/low-intensity-geoengineering-microbubbles-and-microspheres/
 
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I'll grant you Lombergs background and motives might be suspect but it does not change the validity of the idea and it's up to policy to keep both geo-engineering an reduced fossil fuel use moving forward.

The cred here is fine and again they address increased albedo

Crops that cool
Could shinier farmland help combat global warming?

Oliver Morton

Making crops shinier could help to cool the planet, a new study suggests.Punchstock
A team of researchers at the University of Bristol, UK, is suggesting that changing the crops farmers grow might help to cool the planet by reflecting more sunlight.

Plants with waxy coatings on their leaves reflect more sunlight than their plainer-surfaced relatives. If more-reflective variants were planted in place of less-reflective ones, the albedo – the proportion of sunlight reflected back into space – of cropland would increase. Other things being equal, that would cool Earth's surface.

Andy Ridgwell and his colleagues suggest that manipulating the waxiness of crops through traditional breeding techniques or genetic modification should raise their albedo by about 20%, from 0.2 to 0.24. On the basis of climate modelling they calculate that the planet would cool by a modest 0.11 ºC. "It's very small on the global average," says Ridgwell. But "what is more important is the summertime effect in specific regions". The mid-latitudes of North America and Eurasia could cool by as much as 1 °C in June, July and August, according to the models. Ridgwell and his colleagues report their results in Current Biology1.

http://www.nature.com/news/2009/090115/full/news.2009.33.html

Even stopping cold with C02 would not reverse the change or stop the warming but albedo change has immediate impact....the extend of that in the north is as yet undetermined as the ice cover reduces during the highest incoming radiation of the year.

There is no fundamental flaw in the idea of increasing albedo as a way to slow the onset.
Doing it cost effectively and without major knock on effects is the trick and would only be part of myriad of efforts to reduce the impact while addressing the source.

Hell from your approach why bother to produce more air conditioners for hot spells as it takes away from reducing carbon. The first world and individuals have to cope and work at the root of the problem and look for solutions that may reduce the scope or timing of the problem.

Given the severity ALL of the above are in play which is why geo-engineered approachs are being studied.
After all, the reduced carbon output approach??? how's that working out? :boggled::rolleyes:

•••

BTW Barry's analysis of micro particles as a albedo change agent is certainly not a hoax and you may contact him directly with questions.
barry.brook@adelaide.edu.au
 
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Even if it can balance the planet's energy budget it'll cut down on photosynthesis which will continue to change the climate in unpredictable ways, and lower food production whilst giving politicians and industry an excuse not to lower carbon emissions, thus lowering the ph of the oceans.

Agreed, the known changes are bad enough, the unknown alterations make GeoEng. systems a choice of last resort, at best, and then only in conjunction with negative fossil fuel emissions and no recycling of atmospheric carbon for fuel uses. If the planet is still emitting even meagerly positive carbon (natural-permafrost/soils/oceans, anthropogenic-fossil fuels) GeoEng. albedo issues only complicate the problem rather than addressing the problem.
 
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Not sure you quite understand the concept here - what is proposed is a localized albedo change.
Aerosols in geo-engineering will be global and I think it's an awful idea.
Ice caps are not global - they are local as would cloudships and micro-bubbles be.
If anything the micro-bubbles may be a strong stimulant locally to the biome.
We already are altering the incoming radiation over some of the most fertile regions on earth and if anything the Arctic biome is becoming more vibrant despite it's negative connotations for the rest of the planet...

One of the big changes in thinking that global warming should be instilling in all of us is that there is no such thing as insignificant local changes. All localities are part of the whole. Alter individual localities and you impact the whole with both known and unknown consequences.
 
t it'll cut down on photosynthesis
that's a crock if it's done on a local scale even if the impact is global and IT"S ALREADY OCCURRING>

We should never stop a viable approach as we already muck the climate and the albedo big time.

Some local systems like monsoon troughs are robust enough to withstand shifts as there is enough natural variation anyways with ENSO.

The South Pacific is a very logical point as it gets a tremendous amount of incoming solar which then warms the ocean and as outgoing IR is trapped.
Making that more reflective will have little impact as as there is nothing nearby to impact and the area is biologically approaching sterile.

Somehow fearing to "alter" things when we've already made and continue to make huge alterations in the albedo and land use seems very odd.
 
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What arrogance. To imagine the south pacific is uninhabited, and almost devoid of life. A good reason not to let people who know nothing about the world, make decisions on what to do with it.
 
maybe I've just become too cynical in my old age but I think what they really mean is -
Still, any new geoengineering schemes should be welcomed--they might just be our biggest hope in the quest to stop serious moves to reduce CO2 emissions.
It is perhaps possible to be too cynical, but I'm afraid that doesn't come close to approaching it.
 
...Somehow fearing to "alter" things when we've already made and continue to make huge alterations in the albedo and land use seems very odd.

It is called a consistent position. Those arguing for a cessation and reversal of the current alterations in albedo and land-use, are arguing against additional alterations due to the problems that we know this will cause, and because of problems we don't know about that may make things worse than they are now. As stated before, option of very last resort only to be used after all anthro ghg emissions have been cut off.
 
I really do not understand your position or their position and I consider it foolish.
There is NO conceivable scenario that we will reach zero anthro GHG emissions.

In the meantime blunting the onset of severity IS possible along several paths.
Waiting til it's all burned ( which is about the only way to get to zero ) will be catastrophic and THEN you want to try an obvious mitigation.

Lets GET sunburned and AFTER put the sun block on.
Geeez...:boggled:
 
There was an old lady who swallowed a Fly.
I don't know why she swallowed a Fly.
I guess she'll die.

There was an old lady who swallowed a Spider.
That wiggled and jiggled and tickled insider her.
She swallowed the Spider to catch the Fly.
I guess she'll die.

There was an old lady who swallowed a Bird...
a Cat... a Dog... a Goat... a Cow...

There was an old lady who swallowed a HORSE.
She died, of course!
 

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