They have been playing with this for years and now they want to go legal with it. They want aircraft able of reaching 80,000 feet while carrying 5,000 tons of material in order to match known volcanic phenomena. Anything less will be grossly insufficient.
This may well be within the capability of the Starship Enterprise and we will need one hundred.
Can no one in the press do the numbers and address scale? The Global Warming meme has been a open door to scientific rubbish by the bushel. At least finally wiser heads are calling it all out for the total fraud it has always been.
Controversial spraying method aims to curb global warming
By Jeff Berardelli CBS News November 23, 2018, 12:35 AM
NEW YORK — A fleet of 100 planes making 4,000 worldwide missions per year could help save the world from climate change. Also, it may be relatively cheap. That's the conclusion of a new peer-reviewed study in Environmental Research Letters.
It's
the stuff of science fiction. Planes spraying tiny sulphate
particulates into the lower stratosphere, around 60,000 feet up. The
idea is to help shield the Earth from just enough sunlight to help keep
temperatures low.
The researchers examined how practical and
costly a hypothetical solar geoengineering project would be beginning 15
years from now. The aim would be to half the temperature increase
caused by heat-trapping greenhouse gases.
This method would mimic what large volcanoes do. In 1991, Mount Pinatubo erupted in the Philippines. It was the second largest eruption of the 20th century, according to the United States Geological Survey (USGS).
In
total, the eruption injected 20 million tons of sulfur dioxide aerosols
into the stratosphere. USGS said the Earth's lower atmosphere
temperature dropped by approximately 1-degree Fahrenheit. The effect only lasted a couple of years because the sulfates eventually fell to Earth.
Although
controversial, some think that trying to mimic the impacts of a volcano
eruption is a viable way to control global warming. This proposed type
of climate geoengineering is called stratospheric aerosol injection
(SAI). Theoretically if done at scale — and sustained — the impact can
be large. The 1-degree temperature drop which accompanied Mount
Pinatubo's eruption is equal to about half of the human-caused warming
Earth has experienced since the Industrial Revolution began.
Dr. Gernot Wagner from Harvard University is an author of the paper.
He said their study shows this type of geoengineering "... would be
technically possible strictly from an engineering perspective. It would
also be remarkably inexpensive, at an average of around $2 to 2.5
billion per year over the first 15 years."
But to reach that
point, the study said an entirely new aircraft needs to be developed.
Partly because missions would need to be conducted at nearly double the
cruising altitude of commercial airplanes. The study's co-author, Wake Smith explained, "No existing aircraft has the combination of altitude and payload capabilities required."
So,
the team investigated what it would cost to develop an aircraft they
dub the SAI Lofter (SAIL). They say its fuselage would have a stubby
design and the wing area — as well as the thrust — would need to be
twice as large. In total, the team estimates the development cost for
the airframe to be $2 billion and $350 million to modify existing
engines.
In their hypothetical plan, the fleet would start with
eight planes in the first year and rise to just under 100 within 15
years. In year one, there would be 4,000 missions, increasing to just
over 60,000 per year by year 15. As you can see, this would need to be a
sustained and escalating effort.
As one may imagine, a concept
like this comes with a lot of controversy. Like treating a fever with
aspirin, this type of engineering only treats the symptoms, it does not
fix the root cause of the warming: Escalating levels of heat trapping
greenhouse gases produced by the burning of fossil fuels.
The American Meteorological Society (AMS) expressed concerns
that the possibility of seemingly quick and inexpensive fixes will
distract the public and policymakers from addressing the underlying
problems and developing adaptation strategies. And if for whatever
reason the aerosol missions stopped, within a few years the temperatures
would shoot up at breakneck pace. A pace that would likely be too fast
for humanity to adjust.
The AMS official policy statement
regarding this type of geoengineering begins with a warning,
"Reflecting sunlight would likely reduce Earth's average temperature but
could also change global circulation patterns with potentially serious
consequences such as changing storm tracks and precipitation patterns."
In
other words, the atmosphere is complex. Any band-aid fix is bound to
have unintended consequences and possibly cause a new set of problems.
The AMS goes on to say results of reflecting sunlight "would almost
certainly not be the same for all nations and peoples, thus raising
legal, ethical, diplomatic and national security concerns." One region
may become a desert, while others become flooded out.
And if we
learn to control SAI to tailor a favorable result, there's the concern
it may be used for the disproportionate benefit of one nation over
another. In a 2017 study
in the publication Nature Communications, the authors warn their work
"... reemphasizes the perils of unilateral geoengineering, which might
prove attractive to individual actors due to a greater controllability
of local climate responses, but with inherent additional risk
elsewhere."
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But perhaps the greatest reason to be skeptical of aerosol solar
sunlight management is that it's not a silver bullet. As carbon dioxide
continues to increase, the oceans are becoming increasingly acidic.
According to NOAA, ocean acidification
can cascade through the ocean food chain, reducing the ability of shell
fish and reef-building corals to produce their skeletons. Injecting
aerosols into the stratosphere simply limits sunshine, it does not
tackle the underlying carbon dioxide build up. The ocean would continue
to acidify.
Despite the potential drawbacks, the AMS does
recognize — even with aggressive mitigation — we can't avoid some
dangerous consequences of climate change
already baked into the system. Plus, the scale of human adaptation is
limited. Therefore, they urge caution and continued research.
The AMS policy statement
closes with: "Geoengineering will not substitute for either aggressive
mitigation or proactive adaptation, but it could contribute to a
comprehensive risk management strategy to slow climate change and
alleviate some of its negative impacts. The potential to help society
cope with climate change and the risks of adverse consequences imply a
need for adequate research, appropriate regulation and transparent
deliberation."
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