Could We Mitigate Super El Niños by Artificially Changing the Climate? A New Study Indicates Yes
Researchers say 9 months of spraying seawater could have nearly halved warming in model tests of the 1997-98 and 2015-16 events.
8 Articles
8 Articles
Targeted marine cloud brightening weakens subsequent El Niño
Abstract Extreme events are often attributable to the compounding effects of anthropogenic warming and natural variability. Marine cloud brightening (MCB), a solar geoengineering proposal to reduce long-term warming, could theoretically mitigate extremes by instead targeting seasonal-to-multiyear phenomena, such as El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Yet the effectiveness of regional MCB to deliberately modify ENSO has not been tested. By explo…
At present, a strong El Niño is opening up in the Pacific. But in the future, Super El Niños might be suffocated in the bud – by cloud manipulation.
Scientists say seawater cloud seeding could prevent Super El Niño and reduce global warming
New Delhi: Scientists have proposed a new way to reduce the impact of a super El Niño by brightening clouds over the Pacific Ocean. A new modelling study has indicated that the ocean might be cooled enough by spraying fine seawater droplets into low-lying marine clouds to weaken the climate event before it peaks. The results suggest that the method could help mitigate extreme global warming associated with El Niño, but the researchers note that …
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