Chattanooga Times Free Press

Scientists propose drying upper atmosphere to combat warming

- BY SETH BORENSTEIN

WASHINGTON — Government scientists have cooked up a new concept for how to potentiall­y cool an overheatin­g Earth: Fiddle with the upper atmosphere to make it a bit drier.

Water vapor — water in its gas form — is a natural greenhouse gas that traps heat, just like carbon dioxide from burning coal, oil and gas. So researcher­s at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and NASA figure if they can just inject ice high up in the air, water vapor in the upper atmosphere would get a bit drier and that could counteract a small amount of the human-caused warmth.

It’s just the spark of an initial idea, said the lead author of a study in Wednesday’s journal Science Advances.

The idea of drying the upper atmosphere is the newest addition to what some scientists are calling a last-ditch toolbox to deal with climate change by manipulati­ng the world’s atmosphere or oceans. Known as geoenginee­ring, it’s often rejected because of potential side effects, and is usually mentioned not as an alternativ­e to reducing carbon pollution, but in addition to emission cuts.

“This isn’t something that we can even implement right now,” said Joshua Schwarz, a NOAA physicist who is lead author of a study in Wednesday’s journal Science Advances. “This is about exploring what might be possible in the future and identifyin­g research directions.”

The way it would conceivabl­y work is that hightech planes could inject ice particles about 11 miles high, just below the stratosphe­re, where the air slowly rises. Then the ice and cold air rise to where it’s coldest and gets the water vapor to turn to ice and fall, dehydratin­g the stratosphe­re, Schwarz said. So far there is no workable injection technique, he said.

At its maximum, injecting 2 tons a week, it could conceivabl­y take out enough water vapor to reduce heating a small amount, about 5% of the overall warming created by carbon from the burning of fossil fuel, Schwarz said. It’s not much and shouldn’t be used as an alternativ­e to cutting pollution, he said.

Schwarz is not quite sure about what side effects could occur, and that’s the problem, other scientists said.

Purposely tinkering with Earth’s atmosphere to fix climate change is likely to create cascading new problems, said University of Victoria climate scientist Andrew Weaver, who wasn’t part of the study. He said the engineerin­g side of this makes sense, but he compared the concept to a children’s story where a king who loves cheese is overrun with mice, gets cats to deal with the mice, then dogs to chase away the cats, lions to get rid of the dogs and elephants to eliminate the lions and then goes back to mice to scare off the elephants.

It makes more sense to deal with the initial problem — the cheese or the carbon dioxide, Weaver said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI ?? The Aral Sea reflects sunlight June 25 outside Muynak, Uzbekistan.
AP PHOTO/EBRAHIM NOROOZI The Aral Sea reflects sunlight June 25 outside Muynak, Uzbekistan.

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