http://m.physicstoday.org/resource/1/phtoad/v66/i8/p8_s3?bypassSSO=1

I read with interest David Kramer’s piece on geoengineering (Physics
Today, February 2013, page 17). I must say, I am more alarmed by what the
geoengineers in his report are proposing than by the climate changes that
are taking place. I believe geoengineers are removed from scientific
reality. They ignore the fact that the climate system and its
components—clouds, hurricanes, and so forth—are highly nonlinear and thus
very sensitive to the initial conditions and to changes in the parameters.
Nevertheless, one could study the system’s response in a probabilistic way
when certain parameters are changed or when we introduce fluctuations, if
the relationships among all the components are known exactly.And here lies
the whole problem with geoengineering. The formulation of the climate
system and its components is only approximately known. More than 30 climate
models are floating around in the climate community, and their predictions
about general dynamics simply don’t agree with each other. In a recent
publication,1 we considered 98 control and forced climate simulations from
23 climate models and examined their similarity in four different fields
(upper-level flow, sea-level pressure, surface air temperature, and
precipitation). We found that except for the upper-level flow, the
agreement between the models is not good. Moreover, none of the models
compares well with actual observations.One person in the Physics
Today story said that geoengineering may result in changes in various
weather patterns, but nobody knows what the changes are going to be and how
they will affect the climate system. If the warming in the Arctic is a big
event to mitigate, then it will require a significant “geoengineering”
effort. To me, that means significant changes will occur elsewhere. Who can
say whether those changes will be less serious than those taking place now?
How can geoengineers talk about modifying clouds and albedo when clouds are
represented in the climate models as mostly linear
parameterizations?Kramer’s report did not mention hurricanes, but
geoengineers also propose to dissipate them. Hurricanes are unique in the
climate system because they represent major self-organization. As
physicists well know, self-organization occurs in dissipative systems in
which energy is not conserved but instead is exchanged with the
environment. Hurricanes involve huge amounts of energy. Scientists have
little idea how the atmosphere and the ocean will be affected if that
energy is not allowed to be exchanged.I would not have a problem with
geoengineering if the physics and dynamics of the climate system were well
known. Climate scientists have a good idea of the large-scale flow of ocean
currents, but detailed measurements are not available. They know the basic
physics of cloud formation and its thermodynamics but do not fully
understand detailed cloud microphysics or the complex connections between
climate and ecosystems. And with complex nonlinear systems, details are
important. So we need to make an effort to improve our understanding of our
climate system and its components before we try to operate on it. We can
engineer a car or a plane because we know the underlying physics of motion,
combustion, and flight, and we understand the role of every component. Can
geoengineers say the same about climate?

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