Science White House is pushing ahead research to cool earth by reflecting back sunlight - What could go wrong?

PUBLISHED THU, OCT 13 2022 • 1:35 PM EDT
Catherine Clifford

KEY POINTS
  • The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy is coordinating a five-year research plan to study ways of modifying the amount of sunlight that reaches the earth in order to temporarily temper the effects of global warming.
  • There are several kinds of sunlight reflection technology being considered, including stratospheric aerosol injection, marine cloud brightening, and cirrus cloud thinning.
  • Stratospheric aerosol injection involves spraying an aerosol like sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, and because it has the potential to impact the entire globe, often gets the most attention.
  • While arguments of moral hazard have handicapped research efforts so far, the idea is getting more urgent attention as impacts of the climate crisis become more extreme and deadly. “The odds are 100 percent that some country pursues sunlight reflection, particularly in the wake of seeing millions of their citizens die from extreme weather,” Chris Sacca, the founder of Lowercarbon Capital, told CNBC.
1665703967104.png
Full frame sun, Climate change, Heatwave hot sun, Global warming from the sun and burning
Chuchart Duangdaw | Moment | Getty Images

The White House is coordinating a five-year research plan to study ways of modifying the amount of sunlight that reaches the earth to temper the effects of global warming, a process sometimes called solar geoengineering or sunlight reflection.

The research plan will assess climate interventions, including spraying aerosols into the stratosphere to reflect sunlight back into space, and should include goals for research, what’s necessary to analyze the atmosphere, and what impact these kinds of climate interventions may have on the Earth, according to the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy. Congress directed the research plan be produced in its spending plan for 2022, which President Joe Biden signed in March.

Some of the techniques, such as spraying sulfur dioxide into the atmosphere, are known to have harmful effects on the environment and human health. But scientists and climate leaders who are concerned humanity will overshoot its emissions targets say research is important to figure out how to balance these risks against a possibly catastrophic rise in the earth’s temperature.

Getting ready to research a topic is a very preliminary step, but it’s notable the White House is formally engaging with what has largely been seen as the stuff of dystopian fantasy. In Kim Stanley Robinson’s science fiction novel, “The Ministry for the Future,” a heatwave in India kills 20 million people and out of desperation, India decides to implement its own strategy of limiting the sunlight that gets to earth.

Chris Sacca, the founder of climate tech investment fund Lowercarbon Capital, says it’s prudent for the White House to be spearheading the research effort.

“Sunlight reflection has the potential to safeguard the livelihoods of billions of people, and it’s a sign of the White House’s leadership that they’re advancing the research so that any future decisions can be rooted in science not geopolitical brinkmanship,” Sacca told CNBC. (Sacca has donated to support research in the area, but has “zero financial interests beyond philanthropy” in the idea and does not think there should be private business models in the space, he told CNBC.)

Harvard professor David Keith first worked on the topic in 1989, and says it’s being taken much more seriously now. He points to a formal statement of support for research from a group he advises called the Overshoot Commission. The Environmental Defense Fund, the Union of Concerned Scientists, and the Natural Resources Defense Council have also indicated support for research into the topic.

To be clear, nobody is saying sunlight reflection modification is the solution to climate change. Reducing emissions remains the priority.
“You cannot judge what the country does on solar radiation modification without looking at what it is doing in emission reductions, because the priority is emission reductions,” said Janos Pasztor, the executive director of the Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative. “Solar radiation modification will never be a solution to the climate crisis.”

Three ways to reduce sunlight​

The idea of sunlight reflection first appeared prominently in a 1965 report to President Lyndon B. Johnson entitled “Restoring the Quality of Our Environment,” Keith told CNBC. The report floated the idea of spreading particles over the ocean at a cost of $100 per square mile. A one percent change in the reflectivity of the earth would cost $500 million per year, which does “not seem excessive,” the report says, “considering the extraordinary economic and human importance of climate.”

The estimated price tag has gone up since then. The current estimate is that it would cost $10 billion per year to run a program that cools the earth by one degree Celsius, said Edward A. Parson, a professor of environmental law at UCLA’s law school. But that is remarkably cheap compared to other climate change mitigation efforts.

A landmark report released in March 2021 from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine addressed three kinds of solar geoengineering: stratospheric aerosol injection, marine cloud brightening, and cirrus cloud thinning.

Stratospheric aerosol injection would involve flying aircraft into the stratosphere, which is between 10 and 30 miles up, and spraying a fine mist that would hang in the air, reflecting some of the sun’s radiation back into space.

“The stratosphere is calm, and things stay up there for a long time,” Parson told CNBC. “The atmospheric life of stuff that’s injected in the stratosphere is between six months and two years.”

Stratospheric aerosol injection “would immediately take the high end off hot extremes,” Parson said. And also it would “pretty much immediately” slow extreme precipitation events too, he said.

“The top line slogan about stratospheric aerosol injection, which I wrote in a paper more than 10 years ago — but it’s still apt — is fast, cheap, and imperfect. Fast is crucial. Nothing else that we do for climate change is fast. Cheap, it’s so cheap,” Parson told CNBC.

“And it’s not imperfect because we haven’t got it right yet. It’s imperfect because the imperfection is embedded in the way it works. The same reason it’s fast is the reason that it’s imperfect, and there’s no way to get around that.”

One option for an aerosol is sulfur dioxide, the cooling effects of which are well known from volcanic eruptions. The 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo, for instance, spewed thousands of tons of sulfur dioxide into the stratosphere, causing global temperatures to drop temporarily by about 1 degree Fahrenheit, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

1665704035805.png
A giant volcanic mushroom cloud explodes some 20 kilometers high from Mount Pinatubo above almost deserted US Clark Air Base, on June 12, 1991 followed by another more powerful explosion. The eruption of Mount Pinatubo on June 15, 1991 was the second largest volcanic eruption of the twentieth century.
Arlan Naeg | Afp | Getty Images

There’s also a precedent in factories that burn fossil fuels, especially coal. Coal has some sulfur that oxidizes when burns, creating sulfur dioxide. That sulfur dioxide goes through other chemical reactions and eventually falls to the earth as sulfuric acid in rain. But, during the time that the sulfur pollution sits in the air, it does serve as a kind of insulation from the heat of the sun.

Ironically, as the world reduces coal burning to curb the carbon dioxide emissions that cause global warming, we’ll also be eliminating the sulfur dioxide emissions that mask some of that warming.

“Sulfur pollution that’s coming out of smokestacks right now is masking between a third and a half of the heating signal from the greenhouse gases humans have already emitted into the atmosphere,” Parson said.

In other words, we’ve been doing one form of sunlight reflection for decades already, but in an uncontrolled fashion with terrible warming effects, explains Kelly Wanser, the executive director of SilverLining, an organization promoting research and governance of climate interventions.
“This isn’t something totally new and Frankenstein — we’re already doing it; we’re doing it in the most dirty, unplanned way you could possibly do it, and we don’t understand what we’re doing,” Wanser told CNBC.

Spraying sulfur in the stratosphere is not the only way of manipulating the amount of sunlight that gets to the earth, and some say it’s not the best option.

“Sulfur dioxide is likely not the best aerosol and is by no means the only technique for this. Cloud brightening is a very promising technique as well, for example,” Sacca told CNBC.

Marine cloud brightening involves increasing the reflectivity of clouds that are relatively close to the surface of the ocean with techniques like spraying sea salt crystals into the air. Marine cloud brightening generally gets less attention than stratospheric aerosol injection because it affects a half dozen to a few dozen miles and would potentially only last hours to days, Parson told CNBC.

Cirrus cloud thinning, the third category addressed in the 2021 report from the National Academies, involves thinning mid-level clouds, between 3.7 and 8.1 miles high, to allow heat to escape from the surface of the earth. It is not technically part of the “solar geoengineering” umbrella category because it does not involve reflecting sunlight, but instead involves increasing the release of thermal radiation.

Known risks to people and the environment​

There are significant and well-known risks to some of these techniques — sulfur dioxide aerosol injection in particular.
First, spraying sulfur into the atmosphere will “mess with the ozone chemistry in a way that might delay the recovery of the ozone layer,” Parson told CNBC.
The Montreal Protocol adopted on September 16, 1987, regulates and phases out the use of ozone depleting substances, such as hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) which were commonly used in refrigeration and air conditioners, but that healing process is still ongoing.
Also, sulfates injected into the atmosphere eventually come down as acid rain, which affects soil, water reservoirs, and local ecosystems.
Thirdly, the sulfur in the atmosphere forms very fine particulates that cause respiratory illness.

The question, then, is whether these known effects are more or less harmful than the warming they would offset.

“Yes, damaging the ozone is bad, acid deposition is bad, respiratory illness is bad, absolutely. And spraying sulfur in the stratosphere would contribute in the bad direction to all of those effects,” Parson told CNBC. “But you also have to ask, how much and relative to what?”

The sulfur already being emitted from the burning of fossil fuels is already causing environmental damage and is already killing between 10 and 20 million people a year due to respiratory illness, said Parson. “So that’s the way we live already,” he said.

Meanwhile, “the world is getting hotter, and there will be catastrophic impacts for many people in the world,” said Pasztor.

“There’s already too much carbon out there. And even if you stop all emissions today, the global temperature will still be high and will remain high for hundreds of years. So that’s why scientists are saying maybe we need something else, in addition — not instead of — but maybe in addition to everything else that is being done,” he said. “The current action/non action of countries collectively — we are committing millions of people to death. That’s what we’re doing.”

For sunlight reflection technology to become a tool in the climate change mitigation toolbox, awareness among the public and lawmakers has to grow slowly and steadily, according to Tyler Felgenhauer, a researcher at Duke University who studies public policy and risk.

“If it is to rise onto the agenda, it’ll be kind of an evolutionary development where more and more environmental groups are willing to state publicly that they’re for research,” Felgenhauer told CNBC. “We’re arguing it’s not going to be some sort of one big, bad climate event that makes us all suddenly adopt or be open to solar geoengineering — there will be more of a gradual process.”

1665704093781.png
A man waits for customers displaying fans at his store amid rising temperatures in New Delhi on May 27, 2020. - India is wilting under a heatwave, with the temperature in places reaching 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit) and the capital enduring its hottest May day in nearly two decades.
Jewel Samad | Afp | Getty Images

Research it now or be caught off guard later?​

Some environmentalists consider sunlight reflection a “moral hazard,” because it offers a relatively easy and inexpensive alternative to doing the work of reducing emissions.

One experiment to study stratospheric aerosols by the Keutsch Group at Harvard was called off in 2021 due to opposition. The experiment would have “threaten the reputation and credibility of the climate leadership Sweden wants and must pursue as the only way to deal effectively with the climate crisis: powerful measures for a rapid and just transition to zero emission societies, 100% renewable energy and shutdown of the fossil fuel industry,” an open letter from opponents said.

But proponents insist that researching sunlight modification technologies should not preclude emissions reduction work.

“Even the people like me who think it’s very important to do research on these things and to develop the capabilities all agree that the urgent top priority for managing climate change is cutting emissions,” Parson told CNBC.

Keith of Harvard agrees. His goal is “simply that we learn more and develop better mechanism for governance,” he told CNBC.

Doing research is also important because many onlookers expect that some country, facing an unprecedented climate disaster, will act unilaterally to will try some version of sunlight modification anyway — even if it hasn’t been carefully studied.

“In my opinion, it’s more than 90 percent likely that within the next 20 years, some major nation wants to do this,” Parson said.
Sacca put the odds even higher.

“The odds are 100 percent that some country pursues sunlight reflection, particularly in the wake of seeing millions of their citizens die from extreme weather,” Sacca told CNBC. “The world will not stand idly by and leaders will feel compelled to take action. Our only hope is that by doing the research now, and in public, the world can collaboratively understand the upsides and best methods for any future project.”

Source (Archive)
 
Idiots try to tackle "alarming and unprecidented global warming" by reducing the amount of sunlight, kicking off an ice age that results in mass extinction of species and extreme world food shortage. World conflict emerges over said food shortage. Humans starve while simultaneously killing each other off over Earth's few morsels of food. Humans become extinct. End of Epoch: Holocene. Curtains close.

Well, great job dumbasses. It wasn't broke to begin with but you still brute forced change in a natural planetary system that's so sensitive and precise that fluctuations can happen when a pimple on a butterfly's ass pops. And for this we had 6 million years of evolution?
Even if we lowered the global temperature by five degrees tomorrow, it would take hundreds, maybe even thousands of years for the ice sheets to advance into things that matter like Scandinavia and Canada. There's a significant lag time between temperature and ice sheet change. Think of ice sheets like steaks, even after they're off the grill, they'll keep cooking, except in this case it's melting or freezing. This is why tipping points are so important. For instance, even if we cut carbon and methane emissions to zero tomorrow, significant parts of Greenland and West Antarctica will likely still melt. This is the main reason geoengineering is being talked about now, because melting ice causes a feedback loop. Ice reflects ninety percent of solar radiation and ocean absorbs ninety percent, you can do the rest.

Even if you don't believe in anthropogenic climate change, climate change is happening. Snow pack for vital rivers is less every year, asian monsoon seasons are more extreme, the American Southwest and Midwest are rapidly depleting vital aquifers, ice sheets are receding, the ocean is warming and acidifying. Needless to say these things are bad. Humanity as we know it is not adapted to a hot earth, so in 200 years if we don't want to be forced to nuke millions of starving poo in loos and spics when they try and take what shit we have left, we should figure out some way to mitigate it.
 
  • While arguments of moral hazard have handicapped research efforts so far, the idea is getting more urgent attention as impacts of the climate crisis become more extreme and deadly. “The odds are 100 percent that some country pursues sunlight reflection, particularly in the wake of seeing millions of their citizens die from extreme weather,” Chris Sacca, the founder of Lowercarbon Capital, told CNBC.
This is about as nonsensical as people claiming that an iceberg would hit the streets of NYC, and that everyone would drown to death.
 
Honestly with the bullshit that these people are pushing, being a 47 year old virgin sitting around in his beige pajamas drinking a banana broccoli milkshake and singing "I'm an Oscar Mayer Wiener" doesn't sound so bad after all.


While I like the Demolition Man reference, I think you’re forgetting that they want you to do that while they eat the steaks right in front of your goddamned face. Then you applaud to endure that you get enough happy points to get the banana strawberry milkshake for once. You know, the kind with the real fruit, as a reward for being a little happy boy.

God, typing that last sentence filled me with American rage.
 
Wow, that sounds futuristic.

So... releasing sulfur dioxide onto the whole planet... what are the consequences?

Oh... so they literally want to murder us all.
Good to know.
Oh, it gets worse.
On other planets, sulfur dioxide can be found in various concentrations, the most significant being the atmosphere of Venus, where it is the third-most abundant atmospheric gas at 150 ppm. There, it reacts with water to form clouds of sulfuric acid, and is a key component of the planet's global atmospheric sulfur cycle and contributes to global warming. It has been implicated as a key agent in the warming of early Mars, with estimates of concentrations in the lower atmosphere as high as 100 ppm, though it only exists in trace amounts. On both Venus and Mars, as on Earth, its primary source is thought to be volcanic. The atmosphere of Io, a natural satellite of Jupiter, is 90% sulfur dioxide and trace amounts are thought to also exist in the atmosphere of Jupiter.
So, a greenhouse gas is going to reduce warming.... how?
Sulfur dioxide is a major air pollutant and has significant impacts upon human health.[42] In addition, the concentration of sulfur dioxide in the atmosphere can influence the habitat suitability for plant communities, as well as animal life. Sulfur dioxide emissions are a precursor to acid rain and atmospheric particulates. Due largely to the US EPA's Acid Rain Program, the U.S. has had a 33% decrease in emissions between 1983 and 2002. This improvement resulted in part from flue-gas desulfurization, a technology that enables SO2 to be chemically bound in power plants burning sulfur-containing coal or oil. In particular, calcium oxide (lime) reacts with sulfur dioxide to form calcium sulfite.
Sulfur dioxide also causes acid rain.
Isn't Aerosolized Sulfur a greenhouse product?
And causes acid rain once it mixes with water. Whoever suggested such an idea needs to be beaten with thirty shoes for their idiocy.
 
While I like the Demolition Man reference, I think you’re forgetting that they want you to do that while they eat the steaks right in front of your goddamned face. Then you applaud to endure that you get enough happy points to get the banana strawberry milkshake for once. You know, the kind with the real fruit, as a reward for being a little happy boy.

God, typing that last sentence filled me with American rage.
You're probably right. It's always possible for things to get worse.

And to think that the real Duke only had aliens to deal with.

And I once thought comic book villains only existed in comic books.
 
  • Feels
Reactions: Matt Damon
Even if we lowered the global temperature by five degrees tomorrow, it would take hundreds, maybe even thousands of years for the ice sheets to advance into things that matter like Scandinavia and Canada. There's a significant lag time between temperature and ice sheet change. Think of ice sheets like steaks, even after they're off the grill, they'll keep cooking, except in this case it's melting or freezing. This is why tipping points are so important. For instance, even if we cut carbon and methane emissions to zero tomorrow, significant parts of Greenland and West Antarctica will likely still melt. This is the main reason geoengineering is being talked about now, because melting ice causes a feedback loop. Ice reflects ninety percent of solar radiation and ocean absorbs ninety percent, you can do the rest.

Even if you don't believe in anthropogenic climate change, climate change is happening. Snow pack for vital rivers is less every year, asian monsoon seasons are more extreme, the American Southwest and Midwest are rapidly depleting vital aquifers, ice sheets are receding, the ocean is warming and acidifying. Needless to say these things are bad. Humanity as we know it is not adapted to a hot earth, so in 200 years if we don't want to be forced to nuke millions of starving poo in loos and spics when they try and take what shit we have left, we should figure out some way to mitigate it.
Geoengineering is not the solution we should immediately jump to, not on this scale.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Elim Garak
To be clear, nobody is saying sunlight reflection modification is the solution to climate change
Then why bother? 3000 words about how to solve global warming with a gimmick, but they have to say the catechism BUT THIS WON'T REALLY WORK WE MUST ALSO REDUCE EMISSIONS AND EAT THE BUGS AND HAVE NO CARS
 
  • Like
Reactions: tehpope and quaawaa
Geoengineering is not the solution we should immediately jump to, not on this scale.
Yeah it's not a good idea, and sulfur dioxide injection is like, the absolute worst of the geoengineering options we have. With SpaceX increasing their heavy lift capacity every year, it's honestly probably feasible to just build a solar screen between the earth and the sun.

The best option is to just hope that fusion power pays off and we can just suck however much carbon and methane out of the air as we want to and bury it in some shithole dead desert.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Toolbox
Lets go Brandon! If we give Hunter a trillion dollars for meth and pot, the smoke will blot out that star! You k ow who liked sunlight? ADOLF HITLER!
 
Back