. Earth Science News .
CLIMATE SCIENCE
Optimizing Climate Change Reduction

This graph shows climate model results relative to the low-CO2 climate. The left side shows results when temperature differences are minimized. The right side shows results when precipitation minus evaporation (PminusE) is minimized. The upper panel shows results for temperature and the bottom panel shows results for precipitation minus evaporation.

In the model, geoengineering reduces the amount of change in both temperature and precipitation minus evaporation caused by high CO2 concentrations. Using a parabolic distribution of aerosols (more aerosols in the polar regions) slightly improves the cancellation of temperature changes but slightly degrades the ability to reverse changes in precipitation minus evaporation. Credit: Courtesy Environmental Research Letters, George Ban-Weiss and Ken Caldeira
by Staff Writers
Palo Alto CA (SPX) Sep 17, 2010
Scientists at the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology have taken a new approach on examining a proposal to fix the warming planet. So-called geoengineering ideas-large-scale projects to change the Earth's climate-have included erecting giant mirrors in space to reflect solar radiation, injecting aerosols of sulfate into the stratosphere making a global sunshade, and much more.

Past modeling of the sulfate idea looked at how the stratospheric aerosols might affect Earth's climate and chemistry. The Carnegie researchers started out differently by asking how, if people decided what kind of climate they want, they would go about determining the aerosol distribution pattern that would come closest to achieving their climate goals.

This new approach is the first attempt to determine the optimal way of achieving defined climate goals. The research is published in the September 16, 2010, issue of the Environmental Research Letters.

"We know that sulfate can cool the Earth because we have observed global temperature decreases following volcanic eruptions," explained lead author George Ban-Weiss.

"Past computer model simulations have shown that injecting sulfate uniformly into the stratosphere could reduce the surface temperature of the Earth, but the equator would be over cooled and the poles under cooled. You would also make the Earth drier, and decrease surface water runoff."

The Carnegie scientists ran five simulations using a global climate model with different sulfate aerosol concentrations depending on latitude. They then used the results from these simulations in an optimization model to determine what distribution of sulfates would come closest to achieving specified climate goals.

They then tested these distributions in the global climate model to assess how well the climate goals were met.

They found that with more sulfate over the poles than in tropical regions, the temperature distribution was more like that of a low carbon dioxide climate. However, changes in the water cycle were most effectively diminished when the sulfates were distributed nearly uniformly.

They found that if the right amount of uniformly distributed aerosols were put into the stratosphere, the magnitude of the temperature change could be diminished by 90% and the change in runoff by two-thirds. Under another scenario with aerosol distributions varying latitudinally as a parabola, the magnitude of temperature change was reduced by 94%, but then runoff changes were only reduced in half.

"Changes in temperature and the hydrological cycle cannot be simultaneously minimized because the hydrological cycle is more sensitive to changes in solar radiation than are surface air temperatures," explained Ban-Weiss.

"Our optimization model worked well because the complex climate models indicate that much of the climate system operates as a very linear system. This is surprising when you hear all the talk of tipping points," remarked co author Ken Caldeira.

He continued, "Of course, this is just one model and it does not include all processes that are important in reality. Our results are illustrative and do not provide a sound basis for making policy decisions."

The specific climate goals and metrics used were somewhat arbitrary. "The study was primarily aimed at developing a new methodology for looking at the climate problem," said Caldeira.

"It's important to stress that geoengineering options can never reverse all of the consequences of greenhouse gas emissions. For example, it doesn't reverse ocean acidification. And it obviously has associated risk. So geoengineering is not an alternative to greenhouse gas emissions reductions." said Ban-Weiss.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Carnegie Institution
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


CLIMATE SCIENCE
Plants And The Carbon Capture Question
Moffett Field CA (SPX) Sep 15, 2010
Planting trees, as everyone knows, is a good way to offset climate change. The more greenery on Earth, the better, since vegetation act as carbon sinks, essentially sucking up the excess CO2 and storing it in leaves, stems, and root systems. But a recent paper published in the journal Nature Geoscience claims we have a long way to go towards understanding the biochemical processes in which ... read more







CLIMATE SCIENCE
UN seeks record two billion dollars for Pakistan disaster

Millennium Development Goals seek end to poverty, hunger

Chile celebrates bicentennial with miners' fate in focus

Philanthropist sees China as charity superpower

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Samsung takes aim at Apple's iPad, iTunes

Home Electrical Wiring Acts As Antenna To Receive Low-Power Sensor Data

Asia defies global newspaper meltdown

E-readers yet to win mass market in China

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Marine Scientists Call For European Marine Observatory Network

Global Fisheries Research Finds Promise And Peril

Drought shrinks Amazon River to lowest level in 47 years

Human Impacts On The Deep Seafloor

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Russia, Canada trade rival Arctic claims

Glaciers Help High-Latitude Mountains Grow Taller

Arctic sea ice shrinks to third lowest area on record

Arctic ice melting quickly, report says

CLIMATE SCIENCE
NGOs call for African biodiversity centre

In hungry region, S.African maize may feed Chinese chickens

Global Project Underway To Preserve Yam Biodiversity

Indian Farmers Adopt Flood-Tolerant Rice At Unprecedented Rates

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Karl claims two lives, dissipates over Mexico

Igor bears down on Bermuda, Karl kills three in Mexico

Hurricane Karl menaces Mexico, Igor eyes Bermuda

Next Iceland eruption will likely cause less havoc: experts

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Mauritanian troops battle Al-Qaeda-linked fighters in Mali

Kenya may be lifeline for new Sudan state

Termites Foretell Climate Change In Africa's Savannas

Nigeria leader replaces military, security heads: presidency

CLIMATE SCIENCE
Factfile on world population growth

Roma issue could overshadow EU summit

Scientists Glimpse Dance Of Skeletons Inside Neurons

European Parliament blasts Roma expulsions


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement