I'm no climate scientist, but seems like a bit of a stretch ...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/sep/02/giant-balloon-and-hosepipe-geoengineering

A balloon and hosepipe as the answer to climate change? It's just pie
in the sky
Increasingly bizarre attempts at geo-engineering simply deflect
attention from the fact we need to cut greenhouse gases


George Monbiot
guardian.co.uk,  Friday 2 September 2011 08.01 EDT
Article history

A team of British academics will undertake the world's first major
'geo-engineering' field test in the next few months
It's atmospheric liposuction: a retrospective fix for planetary over-
indulgence. Geo-engineering, which means either sucking carbon dioxide
out of the atmosphere or trying to shield the planet from the sun's
heat, is an admission of failure, a failure to get to grips with
climate change. Is it time to admit defeat and check ourselves into
the clinic?

The question has arisen again with the launch of a new experiment
funded by Britain's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research
Council, injecting particles (in this case water droplets) into the
atmosphere from a gigantic balloon attached to a hosepipe. The
eventual aim, if such experiments are deemed successful, is to squirt
large amounts of sulphate aerosols into the stratosphere, to reduce
global warming by scattering sunlight back into space.

There are five issues affecting all the proposed geo-engineering
technologies. Are they effective? Are they cheap? Are they safe? Do
they solve the other problem associated with rising greenhouse gas
emissions: ocean acidification? Do they introduce moral hazard? (This
means the risk that you'll behave more recklessly if you're insulated
from the effects of your actions.)

Broadly speaking, the cheap and effective options are dangerous; the
safe options are expensive or useless. This isn't always the case.
Seeding the oceans with iron filings, for example, is probably both
useless and dangerous. The intention is to stimulate a bloom of algae
which absorbs carbon dioxide then sinks to the ocean bed. Not only is
little of the gas removed from surface waters by this method; but,
because the iron mops up oxygen, it stimulates the production of
methane, a potent greenhouse gas. The technique is likely both to
damage life in the oceans and cause more global warming than it cures.

There are dozens of proposed techniques. Here's a small sample:
Sucking CO2 out of the air using artificial trees. Safe. Effective.
Fantastically expensive.

Growing biomass then burying it or dumping it in the sea. Ecologically
damaging. Likely to exacerbate famine. Ineffective (because it can't
be scaled up sufficiently). Fairly cheap.

Dumping lime or calcium or magnesium silicates into the sea, where
they react with carbon dioxide. Fairly safe. Effective. Expensive. Has
the advantage of potentially reversing ocean acidification, but the
amount of quarrying required to produce enough ground-up rock is
likely to be prohibitive.

Painting buildings white to ensure that the earth absorbs less of the
sun's heat. Safe. Useless. Expensive.

Whitening clouds to reflect more sunlight, most feasibly by spraying
salt water into the air. Middling dangerous. Middling useless.
Middling cheap.

Shooting mirrors into space. Not very dangerous. Effective.
Staggeringly expensive.

You can read more detailed summaries of these options in a report
published by the Royal Society.

But of all techniques, it's the notion of injecting reflective
particles into the atmosphere – the technique the balloon and hosepipe
experiment is designed to test – that has received most attention.
There's an obvious reason for this: it is both cheap and effective. It
is also extremely dangerous.

The reason seems almost as incredible as the proposed technologies,
but it's rooted in solid science. In fact we've already tested the
method at a very large scale, with catastrophic results. Unfortunately
no one realised we were running the experiment until three decades
after it began.

It wasn't until 2002 that a paper was published linking the great
famines of the 1970s and 1980s with atmospheric sulphate particles
produced in the northern hemisphere. But the link, which has now been
made in a number of papers, listed below, seems to be conclusive:

LD Rotstayn and U Lohmann, 1 August 2002. Tropical Rainfall Trends and
the Indirect Aerosol Effect. Journal of Climate, vol 15, pp2103-2116

IM Held, TL Delworth, J Lu, KL Findell, and TR Knutson, 13 December
2005. Simulation of Sahel drought in the 20th and 21st centuries.
PNAS, vol 102, no 50, pp17891-17896. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0509057102

M Biasutti and A Giannini, 8 June 2006. Robust Sahel drying in
response to late 20th century forcings. Geophysical Research Letters,
vol 33, no 11. DOI: 10.1029/2006GL026067

JE Kristjansson et al, 23 December 2005. Response of the climate
system to aerosol direct and indirect forcing: Role of cloud
feedbacks. Journal of Geophysical Research – Atmospheres, vol 110, no
D24
By reducing the size of the droplets in clouds, thereby ensuring that
they reflected more light (which is the desired outcome of the current
experiment), the sulphate particles lowered the temperature of the
sea's surface in the northern hemisphere. The result was to shift the
Intertropical Convergence Zone – a region close to the equator in
which moist air rises and condenses into rain – southwards. The Sahel,
which covers countries such as Ethiopia, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Burkina
Faso and Senegal, is at the northern limits of the zone. As the rain
belt was pushed south, the Sahel was left high and dry. As a result of
the clean air acts, between 1970 and 1996 sulphur emissions in the US
fell by 39%. This appears to have helped the North Atlantic to warm,
allowing the rains to return to the Sahel in the 1990s.

The balloon and hosepipe experiment is a complete waste of time. The
hazardous effects of injecting particles into the atmosphere are
unlikely to make themselves known until the technique is deployed on a
very large scale and for several years. The impacts of small-scale
tests will be lost in the noise of global weather. A full-scale
experiment would be, to say the least, unethical.

As a recent paper in Nature Geoscience points out, it is "physically
not feasible" to stabilise global rainfall and temperature by means of
this technique while greenhouse gas emissions are still rising. The
effects of shooting particles into the atmosphere will vary
dramatically in different parts of the world, helping some, harming
others. It's impossible to see how the countries likely to be harmed
by this technique would agree to it. If it were imposed on them it
would lead to the mother of all conflicts – and the mother of all
lawsuits.

It is so obvious that this approach is a non-starter that the £1.6m
the UK government is spending on the experiment would be better used
to investigate those age-old questions of how to turn lead into gold
or extract sunshine from cucumbers.

This is not to suggest that we should dismiss all geo-engineering
techniques out of hand. But, like liposuction, none of those being
proposed are simultaneously safer, cheaper and more effective than
addressing the problem at source. This means reducing our greenhouse
gases. A good diet and plenty of exercise are better than the knife.

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