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Politics : View from the Center and Left -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Metacomet who wrote (249077)4/14/2014 5:20:42 PM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 542907
 
  • re....Turn those defense contractors into weather engineering systems houses
I read a study recently.......

that said..

The Engineering of the Atmosphere...

was " a Bad Idea...whose time had come"

  • Natural process: [10] Stratospheric sulfur aerosols are created by existing atmospheric processes (especially volcanoes), the behavior of which has been studied observationally. [11] This contrasts with other, more speculative climate engineering schemes which do not have natural analogs (e.g. space sunshade).
  • Speed of action: [12] Solar radiation management works quickly, in contrast to carbon sequestration projects such as carbon dioxide air capture which would take longer to have an effect, as the latter relies on removing large amounts of carbon dioxide before they become effective; [6] however, gaps in understanding of these processes exist (e.g. the effect on stratospheric climate and on rainfall patterns) [13] and further research is needed. [14]
  • Technological feasibility: In contrast to other climate engineering schemes, such as space sunshade, the technology required is pre-existing: chemical manufacturing, artillery shells, fighter aircraft, weather balloons, etc. [5]
  • Cost: The low-tech nature of this approach has led commentators to suggest it will cost less than many other interventions. Costs cannot be derived in a wholly objective fashion, as pricing can only be roughly estimated at an early stage. However, an assessment reported in New Scientist suggests it would be cheap relative to cutting emissions. [15] According to Paul Crutzen (Nobel Prize ...Atmospheric Chemistry) annual cost of enough stratospheric sulfur injections to counteract effects of doubling CO2 concentrations would be $25–50 billion a year. [2] This is over 100 times cheaper than producing the same temperature change by reducing CO2 emission