A Planetary Cooling Hose by Roderick A. Hyde

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Renaud de RICHTER

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Sep 11, 2025, 2:53:51 PM9/11/25
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PDF https://www.arxiv.org/pdf/2509.07985   104 pages, 55 figures

A Planetary Cooling Hose
Roderick A. Hyde

    Geoengineering may offer a way to pause global warming, providing the time for more permanent solutions to become effective. Erection of a high-altitude hose offers an affordable and near-term approach to deliver sulfur-bearing fluids to the stratosphere in order to perform geoengineering via solar radiation management. We discuss the design of a hose extending to an altitude of 20 km and sized to deliver 100 ktons of sulfur per year. The sulfur, in the form of H2S, is pushed up the hose by a pump on the ground and then sprayed out at the top, forming H2SO4 aerosols which scatter enough sunlight to perform geoengineering. Because the hose operates continuously, it only has to deliver about 50 gallons/minute (little more than a garden hose). The flux from a single hose is not sufficient to stop global warming by itself, but is enough to test the effect of the aerosols, and, once replicated to about 20 sites across the planet, can offset all the warming caused by atmospheric CO2 .
    Two varieties of hose are presented here, one delivering H2S as a liquid and the other as a gas. Pumping liquid H2S through a narrow 20 km hose requires high pressure, which can be handled by strong and lightweight hose walls or by placing intermediate pumps along the hose. The hose is held up by a suite of balloons, either all at its top, or with some placed along its length as well. The greatest challenge in suspending such a hose is wind, which if not dealt with properly (by streamlining both the balloons and the hose) will collapse the hose. The wide hoses needed to deliver gaseous H2S are particularly susceptible to wind, so must be enclosed within lightweight aero-shrouds to reduce wind forces.
    After treating the design of these two hoses, we lay out the steps needed to develop and fabricate them, and conclude with some thoughts on how the hoses might be fielded.

Alan Robock

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Sep 11, 2025, 3:07:36 PM9/11/25
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Alan Robock

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