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September
2009 - [Sustainable Concepts] Cloud Seeding and Natural Insecticides
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Sustainable
Concepts |
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| Design
Forward Newsletter |
September
2009, vol. 78 |
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Greetings!
Welcome to the September 2009 newsletter from Design
Forward. Please take some time to enjoy this month's
features.
Quote of the Month: "Nature provides a free lunch,
but only if we control our appetites."
-William Ruckelshaus, Business Week, 18 June 1990

Lisa A. Swan
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Cloud-seeding
ships could combat climate change |
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It should be possible to counteract the global
warming associated with a doubling of carbon dioxide
levels by enhancing the reflectivity of low-lying
clouds above the oceans, according to researchers
in the US and UK. John Latham of the National Center
for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, US, and colleagues
say that this can be done using a worldwide fleet
of autonomous ships spraying salt water into the
air.
Clouds are a key component of the Earth's climate
system. They can both heat the planet by trapping
the longer-wavelength radiation given off from the
Earth's surface and cool it by reflecting incoming
shorter wavelength radiation back into space. The
greater weight of the second mechanism means that,
on balance, clouds have a cooling effect.
'Twomey effect' boosts reflectivity
Latham's proposal, previously put forward by himself
and a number of other scientists, involves increasing
the reflectivity, or "albedo", of clouds lying about
1 km above the ocean's surface. The idea relies
on the "Twomey effect", which says that increasing
the concentration of water droplets within a cloud
raises the overall surface area of the droplets
and thereby enhances the cloud's albedo. By spraying
fine droplets of sea water into the air, the small
particles of salt within each droplet act as new
centres of condensation when they reach the clouds
above, leading to a greater concentration of water
droplets within each cloud.
Latham and co-workers, including wave-energy researcher
Stephen Salter of Edinburgh University, claim that
such spraying could increase the rate at which clouds
reflect solar energy back into space by as much
as 3.7 Wm-2. This is the extra power per unit area
that scientists say will arrive at the Earth's surface
following a doubling of the concentration of atmospheric
carbon dioxide compared to pre-industrial levels
- 550 ppm vs 275 ppm (Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A DOI:10.1098/rsta.2008.0137).
New spin on sailing
The 300-tonne unmanned ships used to seed the clouds
would be powered by the wind, but would not use
conventional sails. Instead they would be fitted
with a number of 20 m-high, 2.5 m-diameter cylinders
known as "Flettner rotors" that would be made to
spin continuously. This spinning would generate
a force perpendicular to the wind direction, propelling
the ship forward if it is oriented at right angles
to the wind (Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A DOI: 10.1098/rsta.2008.0136).
These rotors would be easier to operate remotely
than sails and would also serve as the conduits
for the upward spray, with the spray consisting
of droplets 0.8 µm in diameter generated by passing
sea water through micro nozzles. The power for the
spray and the cylinder rotation would be provided
by oversized propellers operating as turbines.
The immediate effect of seeding clouds in this way
would be a local cooling of the sea surface, and
as such the technique could be targeted at coral
reefs, diminishing polar ice sheets or other vulnerable
regions. However, the great thermal heat capacity
of the ocean and the currents within it mean that
these initial effects would eventually spread across
the globe.
Fleet of 1500
Latham and colleagues calculate that, depending
on exactly what fraction of low-level maritime clouds
are targeted (with some regions, notably the sea
off the west coasts of Africa and North and South
America, more susceptible to this technique than
others), around 1500 ships would be needed altogether
to counteract a carbon doubling, at a cost of some
£1m to £2m each. This would involve an initial fleet
expanding by some 50 ships a year if the scheme
is to keep in step with the current rate of increase
in atmospheric carbon-dioxide levels.
This cloud-seeding proposal is one of a number of
ideas put forward by scientists in recent years
to "geoengineer" the Earth in response to climate
change rather than, or as well as, deal with the
causes of the change. A series of papers on several
proposals, including Latham's, have been published
in a recent issue of the journal Phil. Trans. R.
Soc. A entitled Geoscale engineering to avert dangerous
climate change.
Latham maintains that his group's idea is not pie
in the sky and that its feasibility is supported
by two of the world's leading computer climate models,
as well as recently obtained experimental cloud
data. He points out that, unlike rival techniques,
the system could be used to vary the degree of cooling
as required and could be switched off instantaneously
if needed. However, he adds more research must be
done to find out a number of unknowns - such as
exactly what fraction of spray droplets will reach
the clouds - and to establish that the technique
would not create any harmful climatic side effects.
More work must also be done on the spray technology,
he says.
About the author
Edwin Cartlidge is a science journalist based in
Italy
Article © Edwin Cartlidge, physicsworld.com
Comment
on "Cloud-seeding ships could combat climate change"
on Lisa's Blog

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Natural
Insecticides |
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As you may be experiencing a increase of ants
in your house or getting ready to plant a winter
garden, here are some tips on natural pest control:
- Garlic
control
- Orange
Oil
- Mint,
cloves, rosemary & thyme can be used as insecticides
- Insecticidal
Soaps
- Neem
Oil - Neem oil is used in gardens and landscapes
against insects that chew on plants such as black
vine weevil.
- Diatomaceous
Earth - Diatomaceous earth is a dry, powdery
material derived from the shells of marine organisms.
It is used mainly to deter and kill crawling pests
both indoors and outdoors.
- Boric
Acid - Boric acid is used mainly in structural
pest control against insects like termites, carpenter
ants and powderpost beetles, and in baits for
cockroaches. Boric acid is generally used in the
borate form, often sodium borate.
- Vinegar
and Salt
Article © Lisa A. Swan, Design Forward
Comment
on "Natural Insecticides" on Lisa's Blog.
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