Radical temperatures experienced since April pose unprecedented threats especially to the oceans. The Atlantic Ocean, home to the world's largest reefs, is warming like never before. As a result of this...
READING NOW Geoengineering: New shipping rules play a role in rising temperatures
The temperatures haven’t even peaked.
The North Atlantic has been warming more slowly than other parts of the world for years. But now it has increased the rate of warming. Last month, the sea surface reached a record 25°C – almost 1°C warmer than the previous highest recorded in 2020 – and temperatures have yet to peak. “This has been a crazy year,” says Tianle Yuan, an atmospheric physicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
The clear and primary driver of this trend is greenhouse gases, which trap the heat that the oceans are constantly absorbing. Another effect is recent weather, particularly stagnant high-pressure systems that suppress cloud formation and allow the oceans to cook in the Sun.
But researchers are now realizing another factor that could fall into the category of unintended consequences: clouds known as ship trails. These clouds do not exist nowadays.
We unintentionally geoengineered
Sulfate or salt particles seed clouds by forming nuclei so that the vapor condenses into droplets. The seeds also form smaller, more numerous droplets, making existing clouds whiter and brighter. This creates a reflective effect of the sun’s rays.
In short, the sulphurous fossil fuels found in shipping have actually temporarily masked much of the warming, convincing the world that global warming does not exist. It might come to mind that “let’s keep spraying sulfur to prevent warming,” but spraying sulfur into the atmosphere can not only lower temperatures, but also turn the skies white, change weather patterns, increase the spread of malaria, deplete the ozone layer and block the light plants need to grow. And, there is a limit to bleaching clouds, and there is a risk of an atmosphere collapse.
Due to the limited time elapsed since the IMO 2020 regulation came into force, the long-term impact of this significant reduction in sulfur emissions is still unclear.
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