Following our discussion a few minutes ago, I've just done a back of the envelope calculation that shows that to deliver a negative forcing of -1Wm-2, 2.4% of Earth's land surface (an area about the size of India) would need to treated. This assumes s starting albedo of 0.2 and an increase to 0.8 which is the albedo of pristine snow.
I think we can assume that painting surfaces white or covering them in reflective material is not going to be a plausible way to provide a worthwhile amount of global cooling. That said, it could provide really worthwhile amounts of local cooling in tropical climates.
It should also be noted that outside of the tropics, painting building roofs white would increase the demand for heating in winter months. It would also require considerable maintenance everywhere to keep the surfaces clean and fully reflective. The cost profile is not attractive.
Mirrors at L1 (a spot between Earth and Sun that's about 1 million miles from Earth), crazy at that might seem at first glance, it could well turn out to be by far the most cost-effective option. Search on 'mirror in space Lagrange L1' and lots of options emerge.
RobertC
Oops! I hit Send too soon.
I meant to add that mirrors in space might fit the notion of an international albedo accord much more neatly than attempts to engage with large numbers of technologies that are perceived to be marginal in their impact and/or potentially too risky.
It becomes a unified global Moonshot approach with a clear objective and very well defined operational focus. The big problem will be decisions around who controls the thermostat; but that applies in all albedo options.
RobertC
L1 as an optimal site for mirrors is an old idea, going back to Arthur C. Clarke. A lot more feasible now!
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Hi Robert and Chris--If you do this, realize that increasing the albedo under cloud coverage has little effect as clouds reflect the radiation back down, and as light below clouds is diffuse, unlikely to make it back to space. The Earth's albedo is currently about 30%. About 25% of the 30% is from clouds, and only about 5% from the surface. So, if cloud coverage is 50% (I think they are actually a bit more), that would mean the average surface albedo is 10%. If clouds are evenly spread over land and ocean (I think they are more likely over the ocean) and oceans cover 2/3 of the planet and the ocean albedo is currently 6%, then the ocean is contributing 4% to the 10% of surface albedo and land is contributing 6% (so 1/3 times 18% average land surface albedo--so high because of deserts and snow/ice.
So, how much does the ocean albedo have to be increased to affect the global albedo by 1%, say from 30 to 31% (or 29% to 30%)?
Well, albedo equals sum of the cloudy share (say 50% cloud cover times 50% cloud albedo) plus the clear air share (50% times 2/3 times 6% for the ocean plus 50% times 1/3 times 18% for the land)---and counting surface actual albedo as the effective albedo to space is a bit high given there will be absorption of the reflected radiation in the atmosphere.
So, as to the proposed increase from brightish flakes over the whole ocean--something likely hard and expensive to achieve (just take a dollar per kilometer and that is 3 times 10 to the 8th, so $300B divided by fractional lifetime of the flake's reflective effectiveness if everything is spread perfectly--so actual cost would be in trillions per year) and .5 times .67 time 6% gives 2% increase in albedo, if everything is perfect (including my calculations). And it would not be.
I think hardly realistic.
Best, Mike
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Hi John
As regards L1 wobbling, that's what research is for. I very much doubt that there are engineering challenges associated with space mirrors that can't be overcome with well-resourced research. I see your concerns as research questions not as reasons to not proceed.
I'm amused by the notion that space mirrors will be a moral hazard for SAI in the same way that SAI is a MH for emissions reduction. I have written extensively about this in this group. MH is nonsense. It is an imagined problem for which there is zero empirical evidence. Moreover, if it ever did emerge as a real problem, it could immediately be stopped by policymakers applying regulations to do so. If they didn't do that for fear of backlash from vested interests, it would be the policymakers' timidity that would be the problem not the MH.
As to space mirrors being developed as a successor to SAI, what if SAI never happens at sufficient scale and speed? I think it's very plausible that SAI will not be deployed at the scale and speed necessary to avoid COCAWKI (the collapse of civilisation as we know it). However much we think it MUST happen, there are many others for whom it MUST NEVER happen, and even more who aren't that interested either way. My crystal balls are not sufficiently reliable to predict the future role of SAI, so I think it prudent to assume that it might not deliver its potential and we'll need something else. Why not space mirrors?
It isn't either/or. It's both/and.
I also think that COCAWKI is plausible, indeed probably rapidly becoming most likely. Contemplating COCAWKI requires a different mindset. Almost no one is yet focussing on that. Perhaps a few preppers are. And Jem Bendell!
RobertC
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Hi Sev--Thanks for the explanation.
Of such proposals in the past, there has been, I think, concern about transferring all those needed soil nutrients to the ocean and so depleting soil fertility on which agriculture depends. Is that an issue of concern when done over an extended period?
Mike
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It’s very risky to overfertilize the ocean because it causes dead zones!
Biogeochemical feedbacks link terrestrial and ocean storage and greatly affect long term CO2 content, especially through limestone production and dissolution.
A recent paper shows that the rise of land plants changed the carbon/phosphorus ratios of the ocean as carbon storage shifted from the ocean to land, which we are now shifting back.
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Hi Sev--It would be really interesting to see how a model reacts to a doubling of the ocean albedo everywhere (or perhaps just over some latitude bands of the ocean)--or just a 50% increase--phased in over, say, five years. Has such a modeling experiment been done with a full global model that would allow the full set of interactions--it would seem quite a simple change to program in?
I think Elizabeth Barnes and her group at CSU did sort of a related experiment by doing just a little SAI everywhere and the result first evident was a slowing of the hydrologic cycle, so less evaporation, etc.
Mike
This might be usefully combined with essential trace element supplementation, such as those in Nualgi that stimulate diatoms specifically.
Are you working with Bhaskar? I’m trying to set up local tests to use Nualgi in sewage contaminated river basins in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to shift to diatoms and fish instead of cyanobacteria and dead zones…..