Climate change damage could be averted by HACKING glaciers to halt rising sea levels, scientists claim
AS GLOBAL warming tightens its grip on our planet, scientists are cooking up creative ways to curb the most damaging effects of the climate crisis.
One bonkers means of inhibiting dramatic sea level rises over the next century, for instance, involves "hacking" glaciers to taper the amount of water they’re pumping into our oceans.
In a recent study, an international team of scientists led by University College London outlined nine techniques that could be employed to slow glacial melting across the teetering ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica.
The schemes would employ “geo-engineering” – controversial, wide-scale technologies that artificially alter the Earth’s climate.
One approach put forward by the team is to brighten the surface of the ice, reducing surface melting.
Another involves pumping liquid carbon dioxide into a glacier’s rocky base.
One of nine solutions suggested by the team involves using a gigantic drill to penetrate down to a glacier's rocky base.
Water could then be pumped from the drill site to slow the icy behemoth down.
"Water trapped under a glacier acts like the air jets that help an air-hockey puck slide easily," Lockley explains.
"If we drill through the ice to let trapped, high-pressure water escape, this will make the glacier stick again.
"An alternative idea is to pump coolant down to the glacier bed. This will freeze the water, instead of removing it."
Another technique outlined in the paper would involve dusting a glacier with snow or artificial sand.
Lockley likens this to wearing a white t-shirt instead of a black one to keep cool on warmer days, because it better reflects sunlight.
"When fresh new snow gets warm or dirty, it absorbs more sunshine. This means that brightening the snow surface can help stop melting," he said.
"Controlling air pollution helps - but we could also create new snow.
"We can make snow with snow machines or cloud seeding aircraft. Dusting the ice with very shiny artificial sand might also work."
A third tactic proposed by the team would involve thickening ice shelves, which act as barriers to glaciers that would otherwise flow out to sea.
Hopefully, say the researchers, this could hold back glaciers for longer.
Rounding off the team's list of proposals are:
- Erecting giant concrete barriers to shore up ice shelves
- Draining melt ponds to increase glacier reflectiveness
- Injecting sun-reflecting particles into the atmosphere
- Using windbreaks to retain natural snow
- Draining meltwater around ice shelves
- Manipulating ocean or air currents around glaciers
The researchers acknowledge that many of their ideas could prove to be prohibitively expensive – and they might not even work.
Geoengineering could also damage the environment, so more research is needed to assess the potential risks involved.
Climate change explained
Here are the basic facts...
- Scientists have lots of evidence to show that the Earth’s climate is rapidly changing due to human activity
- Climate change will result in problems like global warming, greater risk of flooding, droughts and regular heatwaves
- Each of the last three decades have been hotter than the previous one and 17 of the 18 warmest years on record have happened during the 21stcentury
- The Earth only needs to increase by a few degrees for it to spell disaster
- The oceans are already warming, polar ice and glaciers are melting, sea levels are rising and we’re seeing more extreme weather events
- In 2015, almost all of the world's nations signed a deal called the Paris Agreement which set out ways in which they could tackle climate change and try to keep temperatures below 2C
Breaking through floating ice to construct concrete barriers, for instance, could lead to the disintegration of glaciers.
Scientists have raised concerns that the long term effects of geoengineering are poorly understood.
Some say the controversial field amounts to "playing God" with the climate.
It also runs the risk of falsely leading people to believe that we no longer need to drastically limit greenhouse gas emissions.
However, Lockley believes that the two can dovetail to effectively manage our rapidly changing environment.
"We absolutely need both," he told The Sun.
"Nobody who works in geoengineering research thinks that we can just ignore the need to cut fossil fuel use dramatically."
In other climate news, summers in spots like the UK and North America could last half the year by the end of the century due to climate change.
Scientists have warned of a ticking time bomb in the Arctic that threatens to cause a climate catastrophe.
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