The Daily - An Engineering Experiment to Cool the Earth

Episode Date: April 5, 2024

Decades of efforts to cut carbon emissions have failed to significantly slow the rate of global warming, so scientists are now turning to bolder approaches.Christopher Flavelle, who writes about clima...te change for The Times, discusses efforts to engineer our way out of the climate crisis.Guest: Christopher Flavelle, who covers how the United States tries to adapt to the effects of climate change for The New York Times.Background reading: Warming is getting worse. So they just tested a way to deflect the sun.Can we engineer our way out of the climate crisis?For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 From The New York Times, I'm Katrin Benhold. This is The Daily. After failing for decades to cut carbon emissions enough to stop the planet from dangerously overheating, scientists are increasingly looking at backup measures. Some that would fight the warming by intervening in the climate itself. Some that would fight the warming by intervening in the climate itself. Today, my colleague Christopher Flavel on the efforts to engineer our way out of the climate crisis. It's Friday, April 5th. So Chris, you've been covering climate change for a while, but recently you've been focused on a very special project. Tell us about this. Yeah, two things have been happening in climate change recently that are really important.
Starting point is 00:01:03 Number one, records have been falling at alarming rates. Last year was again, the hottest year on record. Much of the world surpassed the sort of important threshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels. So the world is getting warmer at alarming rates. At the same time, emissions aren't falling, right? Sort of the message of the last generation has been, we need to cut emissions really to almost zero by the end of the century. And in fact, the reverse is happening. Emissions are continuing to rise.
Starting point is 00:01:40 At the same time, the number and characteristics of weather disasters have become really alarming. So the effects of that warming have become really clear, and it's clear that the world is struggling to adapt to those effects. is there's more research and more consideration of, okay, what if we can't cut emissions fast enough? What if we're going to have this really severe degree of warming? Can we do something else maybe temporarily to sort of buffer those effects? And that's led to this question of what kinds of changes can we make deliberately to the atmosphere, to the environment, that will maybe produce some sort of artificial cooling in the meantime? So earlier this week, I was able to watch, as scientists did, the first outdoor tests in the U.S. on a technology that will aim to do just that. It's called marine cloud brightening. So what is this idea of brightening the clouds? Where did it originally come from?
Starting point is 00:02:54 So everyone I talked to pointed back to one really important moment in 1990 when a British physicist named John Latham was taking a hike in Wales with his young son, and they were looking out at the clouds over the Irish Sea. And as Dr. Latham later told it, his son asked him, hey, why are clouds bright? And Dr. Latham said, well, because they reflect sun back in the sky. And his son said, so they're like soggy mirrors. And Dr. Latham said, well, because they reflect sun back in the sky. And his son said, so they're like soggy mirrors. And Dr. Latham went on to write a letter in 1990 that was published in the journal Nature saying, you know what? If we can deliberately manipulate these clouds, maybe we can make them more reflective and actually counteract the effects of global warming. That was sort of the inception point for this idea.
Starting point is 00:03:50 And it led to decades of research culminating in this week's test. So the idea is, if you can make clouds more reflective, you can reflect more of the sun's heat back into space, so it won't get trapped in the Earth's atmosphere in the first place. Exactly. That's what they're trying to do. That's a very simple and at the same time a very powerful idea. I love actually that they were hiking in Wales. That's where I am right now. And we sure have a lot of clouds here, rain clouds.
Starting point is 00:04:23 But tell me more about what you saw at the testing site. So this Tuesday, a little after seven in the morning, I pulled up in a parking lot on a dock at the edge of Alameda. I'm standing at the gangplank to the USS Hornet, a decommissioned aircraft carrier in San Francisco Bay. I'm here for the first test in the U.S. of a machine that was designed to try to brighten clouds, a way of maybe temporarily cooling the earth. And I made my way up one of the massive gangplanks and came in to find a cluster of some of the top atmospheric scientists in the world. Chris.
Starting point is 00:05:18 How do you do? Looking really excited. do. Looking really excited. And they accompanied me out to the flight deck. Here we are. Of this aircraft carrier. Oh man. Pretty epic. It is pretty great. Which was a bit like a party. They'd set up you know a little table on the side with some coffee and some sandwiches and people were chatting and saying hi to each other. And I them why they were excited so i know a thousandth of what you know and i still find it exciting are you guys like walk me through is this like a big day for you or just like one more test no this is a big day for me and they said this is actually a huge day in their research.
Starting point is 00:06:07 Yeah, this is the culmination of years of work, right? Yeah. Or not. Wow. And tell me about what exactly they were so excited about and what they were doing on the ship. Yeah. The thing everyone was excited about was this machine set up at the far end of the flight deck of this aircraft carrier. It's blue. it's shiny, it looks a bit like a snowmaker or maybe like a spotlight. This machine is a sprayer. What it does is it sprays really, really, really small aerosol particles, in this case, smashed up sea salt,
Starting point is 00:06:42 a long distance at just the right size and just the right volume. Because in theory, at some point, you could use this machine to change the size and number of the droplets in the clouds. You can make them brighter. Conceptually, it's possible. The question is, technologically, can we do it?
Starting point is 00:07:01 Yeah, the particles are coming out in a super concentrated there, right? So whatever's coming out of that circle there is basically going to be huge by the time it gets to the cloud. And so the goal with this test was they spent years building this sprayer that can use really high-pressured air to sort of smash salt particles into super small bits, about 1,700 the size of a human hair. Wow. What they didn't know until this week, and they're trying to find out right now,
Starting point is 00:07:33 once you spray it, do those aerosols that are so finely tuned stay that size? In theory, they should. What they don't know is things like wind and humidity and temperature could potentially cause them to coagulate, to regroup, which would throw the whole thing off. If the aerosols you're shooting into clouds are too big, you can backfire the whole purpose. You can wreck what you're trying to do because you make clouds less reflective, not more reflective. So the whole goal of the experiment is, okay, can they make the spray just so, so that even in outdoor conditions, the aerosols that are so finely sized remain the size you want them to be? And that's what they're trying to find out. And you watched the actual test of this. What did you see? What happened?
Starting point is 00:08:21 Those instruments are emitting a slight hum. So operating the sprayer is not straightforward. And they are filling the tanks with the salt water that we use to produce the mist. There was somebody crouched on the control deck, the panel of instruments at the side of the sprayer. So I went over and tried to sit next to him and watch him as he turned a series of knobs in careful sequence. Okay, yeah, everybody, we're going to run some air. Matt, we need two minutes here just to have power on the sprayer. And after a series of tests to make sure the valves were clear. Finally, the moment came.
Starting point is 00:09:12 And he got an all clear over his walkie talkie and he turned on the water. And the air. It's the sound of the compressor. It pushes pressurized air through the sprayer, making a sort of a dull, throbbing sensation. You can feel it a little bit through the deck of the ship. We all had ear protectors, and even with the ear protectors, it was really loud. And then you could almost feel the spray bursting out of this machine
Starting point is 00:09:50 and watch it travel really hundreds of feet down the deck of the aircraft carrier. Okay, water off, fan off. Good job. Awesome, guys. You're done? Thank you. Excellent. First test is done. My first signal that things had gone well was I looked up when the spray machine was turned off and saw some scientists high-fiving down the deck.
Starting point is 00:10:19 What did you think? It's beautiful. Is it what you thought it would be? It's beautiful. Is it what you thought it would be? It's better. And I'm optimistic that it will tell us a lot about what these things do. This has made me really optimistic. And the idea is to do sort of several short bursts like that through the day. And everyone seemed really excited that this thing they'd worked on for years was finally happening in this really important outdoor test.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Okay, so it sounds like this test was a success, right? Yeah, they stressed that they need a lot of time to really go over the results. They'll be doing this test again and again in different weather conditions, but the initial reaction seemed positive. They seemed to think that the numbers they were getting were what they were hoping to see. And so now the goal is, can they maintain the right size aerosols even in different conditions down the deck of this aircraft carrier? That'll give them some confidence that if they decided one day to try and do this on the open ocean to actually brighten clouds, they'd have the ability to do it.
Starting point is 00:11:30 So Chris, if all of this works, how and when do these researchers anticipate that this would actually be used? Well, here's a great example. In the month of February, a version of this testing was also happening in Australia, off the coast of February, a version of this testing was also happening in Australia, off the coast of Australia, where researchers were testing whether marine cloud brightening could be used to cool the ocean just a little bit around the Great Barrier Reef. Really high ocean temperatures are causing bleaching of that coral reef. The idea was, could they use marine cloud brightening to save some of those reefs from dying?
Starting point is 00:12:06 And that's probably a good idea of the sort of fairly localized situation where you could, in theory, if you do it right, have a fairly quick degree of cooling that could maybe try to avert or mitigate something pretty acute, like a heat wave or a stretch of warm weather that would kill coral. But the science is probably too new at this point to sort of talk about the right situations to use it. Those conversations are all down the road as researchers look at these and other ideas for what they could do if things get really bad. We'll be right back. So, Chris, when I think about solutions to climate change, you know, it usually involves these very hard things we need to do. Like, you know, change the way we live, the way we drive, what we eat. We need these international treaties. We need carbon taxes, regulation. There's lots of hard stuff. And we haven't
Starting point is 00:13:29 gotten that far. But here you've just told me about this technology that, if it ends up working, could actually help cool the planet without anyone needing to do any of these hard things. It sounds great. It does sound great. Now, we've got to say, first of all, that whenever anybody working on this stuff talks about it, the first thing they say is, this is not an alternative to reducing emissions. This is looking for ways to buy time as we try to cut emissions. There's no way to really deal with climate change that doesn't entail burning less fossil fuel and quickly.
Starting point is 00:14:08 But yes, in addition to brightening clouds, there's other ways of trying to bounce more sunlight back into space and other ideas. My colleague David Gellis wrote the first piece in our series looking at the idea of removing carbon dioxide directly from the air, sort of reversing our past emissions. Other ideas include finding ways to suck up more of the CO2 in the oceans. There's even ideas that my colleague, Carl Buckley, covered of could we build a sort of a giant parasol way out in space that would reflect or scatter more of the sunlight and prevent some of that sunlight from even reaching the earth
Starting point is 00:14:51 in the first place? So there's a huge number of ideas that until very recently seemed just so bizarre and or so expensive and or so, that they were hardly worth pursuing seriously. And what's changed really quickly in the last year or two is all of a sudden those ideas have switched from being too wild to spend much time on to being so important because the situation is so dire that we can't not look at them. And that's the pivot that my team has been trying to cover. And what characterizes all these initiatives is that rather than reducing our own emissions, we're now trying to intervene in the climate in a proactive way, engineering the climate in a way. Yes. And you hear the phrase geoengineering to describe
Starting point is 00:15:46 these ideas sort of collectively. And what people who research this will stress is we're already geoengineering, right? For more than a century, we've been geoengineering in the sense of putting climate changing pollution into the atmosphere that's caused the planet to change by trapping more heat in the atmosphere. So the question is, do we want to deliberately geoengineer in a way that will ease that pressure rather than just making it worse? Of course, there's some controversy attached to this, and there are some pretty valid concerns about what the consequences might be if we keep on pursuing these ideas. And why are they controversial? Well, the first concern that you hear is this idea of moral hazard, that if people come to think
Starting point is 00:16:39 that there are ways of addressing climate change that don't require them to change their lifestyle or sacrifice conveniences or change the kinds of cars they drive or how their power is generated. That they will lose interest in those tough changes and the sort of momentum such as it is towards cutting emissions will fade even more. towards cutting emissions will fade even more. But we don't know yet whether politicians or governments or companies or just people will sort of misuse these ideas to try to shirk the harder work of reducing the amount of greenhouse gases we emit. Another really important argument you hear is, okay, side effects. Do we really know what would happen if we tried these things? Marine cloud brightening is one of those situations where there are known unknowns and unknown unknowns, as they say. The known unknowns are, well, what would happen to things like ocean circulation? What would happen to precipitation? Well, what would happen to things like ocean circulation?
Starting point is 00:17:44 What would happen to precipitation? What would happen to the effect on the amount of energy reaching the ocean? What would happen to the fisheries industry? We don't really know, and researchers are trying to find out what those effects might be. Then there are the unknown unknowns. If you start deliberately changing the cloud system, well, what else might happen that we haven't anticipated? Do you move the location of where rainfall happens? Do you perhaps upset the monsoon cycle in India? Do you change the ability to grow food in parts of the world? So if you do this at a bigger scale, the consequences of those potential side effects
Starting point is 00:18:23 get more and more severe. And I talked to environmentalists who said that's a real concern. You just can't model those risks. And you sort of, to a degree, by pursuing this, have to accept that that risk is real and almost roll the dice. And I guess much like climate change, where you have a group of countries that is most responsible for CO2 emissions that have caused the global warming, and then a whole other group of countries that are probably suffering the worst consequences, even though they haven't contributed to those emissions nearly as much. interference with the climate at the initiative of some countries, presumably the wealthy countries that have that technology, would then have unintended consequences in countries that have no control over this. So that's tricky. That's right. And that takes us to sort of our third category of concerns, which is, okay, let's assume that things are bad enough,
Starting point is 00:19:20 that collectively societies want to take those risks of those side effects. Well, then who chooses? Like who decides when we get to that point? Is there even a mechanism that would allow you to get sort of informed consent from everybody who'd be affected? And if these would affect everybody, it's hard to imagine how you would build a governance mechanism that would allow you to say, before we push the button,
Starting point is 00:19:44 are we sure everybody's okay with this? The only counter to all of these concerns is, compare it to what, right? And this is the point that researchers make. Okay, this is dangerous. Okay, it presents challenges, but compare it to what? Their point is, don't compare it to a situation where everything's fine. Compare it to a situation where we're actually in, to a situation where everything's fine. Compared to a situation we're actually in, where the trajectory of global warming is so serious and isn't looking like it'll get better anytime soon. Well, compared to those risks, how do these risks compare, right? And the question is, would you rather have a world of basically uncontrolled warming? And we have an idea of what that brings, wildfires and droughts and sea level rise and storms and diseases. Is that better than some of these more perhaps
Starting point is 00:20:33 controlled risks associated with deliberately tinkering with the environment? So it's almost like pick your poison. What sort of threats do you want to embrace? And that's the overwhelming dilemma that we face with this technology. In a way, what it makes me think is that these crazy initiatives that we've been hearing about from you are, yes, they're a testament to our failure in a way to combat climate change so far, because, you know, they're such a last resort, really, such a sort of an act of desperation. But at the same time, it seems like this urgency has actually unleashed a lot of energy and money to tackle the problem. Yeah, and there's good news in this. The good news is the research we're talking about demonstrates the really amazing capacity of scientists to come up with new ideas, develop new technologies, test them quickly,
Starting point is 00:21:25 and at least build some options, right? So like if there's any, if there's any rays of hope around climate change, it's that humanity's capacity to innovate and find new ideas is almost endless. So the question is not, are we sort of pursuing the wrong research ideas? And the question is, can we find good ideas fast enough to avert the really serious consequences of climate change that we're already facing? Chris, I just remember that scientist we heard in the tape from your visit, and she was so excited, and she said that she was really optimistic. I wonder, how are you feeling? I think the frustration that you'll hear
Starting point is 00:22:17 among climate reporters, and I'm in this group, is that most people seem not to appreciate the severity of the situation that we're in. There seems to be a view that we're dealing with this, you know, people are buying electric cars and we're getting more solar power and wind power and things are going the right way and this will be okay. Things are not going the right way. Not only are we on the wrong trajectory in terms of emissions, we are so far away from being on the right trajectory for emissions that it's hard to imagine us cutting emissions globally at a rate anywhere near fast enough to avoid almost unbearable consequences of global warming. So that's the downside.
Starting point is 00:23:06 Here's the good news, though. I do think, and this again, I think is a view among other climate reporters, the capacity of scientists and of companies to change track and to find new products and apply new ideas is really impressive, right? It just doesn't feel like there's a connection yet between the urgency of the situation and the way people and companies and governments are responding. And so I guess if the question is how I feel about this, I am constantly amazed at the ingenuity of the researchers I come across in my job every day. What I don't yet know about is whether or not society will move fast enough to adopt and apply those ideas before the conditions that we face from climate change become almost unbearable. Well, Chris,
Starting point is 00:24:22 on this cautiously optimistic note, thank you very much. Thank you very much. Thank you. We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today. In a tense phone call with Israel's leader, Benjamin Netanyahu on Thursday, President Biden called the airstrikes that killed aid workers this week unacceptable and threatened to condition its future support on how Israel addresses concerns
Starting point is 00:24:54 about civilian casualties and the humanitarian crisis in Gaza. It was the first time that Biden explicitly sought to leverage American aid to influence Israel's conduct of the war against Hamas, although he stopped short of saying he would halt arms supplies or impose conditions on their use. Hours later, Israel responded by saying it would increase aid deliveries and reopen at least one border crossing into Gaza that's been closed since the October 7th attack. American officials said they'd watch how and when the new measures actually go into effect,
Starting point is 00:25:31 making clear ongoing support would depend on Israel's next step. Today's episode was produced by Michael Simon Johnson, Eric Krupke, Luke van der Ploeg, and Rochelle Bonja. It was edited by Patricia Willens. Contains original music by Rowan Nemistow, Alicia Baitube, and Marion Lozano, and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wanderley.
Starting point is 00:26:04 Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansberg of Wanderley. The Daily is made by Rachel Quester, Lindsay Garrison, Claire Tennisketter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon-Johnson, Brad Fisher, Chris Wood, Jessica Chang, Stella Tan, Alexandra Lee Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Mark George, Luke Vanderploeg, MJ Davis-Lynn, Dan Powell, Sydney Harper, Michael Benoit, Liz O'Balen, Asta Chaturvedi, Rochelle Bonja, Diana Nguyen, Marion Lozano, Corey Schreppel, Rob Zipko, Elisheba Etube, Thank you. Special thanks to Lisa Tobin, Sam Dolnick, Paula Schumann, Larissa Anderson, Julia Simon, Sophia Milan, Mahima Shaplani, Elizabeth Davis-Mura, Jeffrey Miranda, Renan Barelli, Maddy Masiello, Isabella Anderson, and Nina Lasam. That's it for The Daily. I'm Katrin Benholt. See you Monday.

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