Poster's note : little new content other than a few names in this layman's
report.

http://blogs.agu.org/geospace/2013/09/27/the-national-academies-contemplate-geoengineering/

The National Academies Contemplate Geoengineering

By Thomas Sumner

The ideas seem lifted from a James Bond super villain’s dastardly plot:
carpeting the Earth with whitened clouds, constructing giant solar
reflectors in space, using chemicals to change the makeup of the
atmosphere. But with scientific models predicting potentially devastating
changes in the world’s climate, seemingly impractical and improbable
geoengineering solutions become more and more alluring.This month at the
National Academy of Sciences in Washington D.C., a 16-person ad hoc
committee of scientists held its second meeting to discuss the practicality
of various methods of purposefully changing Earth’s environment to combat
climate change, sometimes called climate engineering or geoengineering.
Convened purely for investigation and discussion rather than making
recommendations, the group cast a wide net for ideas, even those they might
ultimately reject as made- for-Hollywood only.One geoengineering approach
would inject aerosols into the stratosphere to reflect away solar
radiation. A 2009 scientific paper evaluated benefits, risks, and costs of
using aircraft, balloons, and other means to loft aerosols, as depicted in
this figure from the paper. Credit: Brian West.The first morning of the
September 10-11meeting, Harvard University geology professor Daniel
Schrag addressed the committee, laying out the climate issues
geoengineering hopes to solve.Schrag said the consequences of climate
change—sea level rise, more severe weather extremes, ocean
acidification—demand action. However, even in a best case scenario with a
perfect political climate and a quick move to low-emission energy sources,
Schrag said fixing carbon dioxide emissions within the foreseeable future
would be impossible.“Scientifically we can’t fix this problem for 100
years,” he argued.This lack of a single simple and viable solution is what
makes geoengineering worth considering, according to Gary Geernaert,
director of the US Department of Energy’s Climate and Environmental
Sciences Division, who spoke to the committee.“There’s no silver bullet for
climate change,” said Geernaert said. “We need to look at all the available
solutions.”

Wild potential plans
Geoengineering breaks down into two main approaches: capturing carbon and
reflecting solar radiation.The first aims to remove carbon dioxide from the
atmosphere, thereby reducing the greenhouse effect warming the planet. The
second hopes to create a cooling effect by bouncing solar radiation away
before it can cause warming. Tactics include dumping large amounts of
reflective asteroid dust into orbit around Earth, making clouds whiter,
seeding the creation of more clouds and covering rooftops with reflective
materials.

The committee gave respectful attention to schemes that even their
proponents consider iffy. Schrag, for instance, mentioned an “impractical”
idea he and his colleagues had to create a massive acid exchange to remove
carbon from the air.When carbon dioxide is mixed with water, it forms a
mild acid called carbonic acid (carbonated water). Limestone can neutralize
the acid, as it does in caves, where the carbon gets bound up in
stalactites and stalagmites.Schrag’s proposal uses massive amounts of
quicklime – the product of breaking down limestone using heat – to
neutralize atmospheric and ocean carbon. Multiple times throughout his
description Schrag branded the plan “completely impractical” – it requires
massive amounts of energy and manpower to operate – yet the committee asked
thoughtful follow-up questions.

Unforeseen consequences

Before a geoengineering project can move forward, scientists need to know
the impacts it will have—both good and bad. Running large-scale tests is
too dangerous, since any unexpected negative consequences would be
similarly large-scale, according to NASA scientist Ralph Kahn.“A lot more
geoscience has to be done before we can consider geoengineering,” said
Kahn.Smaller tests may be safer, but any potential benefits would likely be
too small to quantify. Luckily natural analogs can provide insights into
the potential effects of geoengineering projects. Volcanoes, for instance,
blast particles into the atmosphere that can reflect the Sun’s rays away
from Earth. Several proposed geoengineering projects suggest emulating this
effect with artificial volcanos. By observing real volcanos, scientists
might see the potential downsides beforehand, preventing swapping one
man-made climate disaster for another.Over the course of the meeting, 15
experts addressed the committee, ranging into politics and ethics as well
as Earth-altering schemes. In coming months, the committee will assemble a
report on three or four example techniques, weighing their potential risks
and consequences

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