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The Weekend Wonk: Jason Box on 5 Factors Behind the Global Heat Wave

https://youtu.be/LYdvn2pGyOw Jason Box has been doing some good explainers in recent months, focusing recently on some of the most important indicators of the record El Nino cycle we are living. Above, one suggested cause of current high Atlantic Sea Surface Temps is of some unintended consequences, actually an example of inadvertent geo-engineering.Science: The Atlantic Ocean…

Covid Cut Gases That Warm the Globe But a Drop in Other Pollution Boosted Regional Temperatures

Covid-19 Cut Gases That Warm the Globe But a Drop in Other Pollution Boosted Regional Temperatures A new study shows how tiny aerosol particles from industrial emissions have an outsized cooling effect. February 15, 2021 Two Iranian men wearing protective face masks walk along the Azadi (Freedom) Square in western Tehran during a spike in air pollution following the Covid-19 outbreak in Iran, on January 12, 2021. Credit: Morteza Nikoubazl/NurPhoto via Getty Images Related Share this article Efforts to slow the Covid-19 pandemic early last year by restricting travel and various forms of commerce pushed greenhouse gas emissions down, at least for a few months. But that didn’t slow global warming, as 2020 tied with 2016 as Earth’s warmest year on record and atmospheric greenhouse gases reached a new high.

Ship exhaust studies overestimate cooling from polluted clouds

February 1, 2021 at 12:00 pm Among the biggest questions for climate change forecasters is how atmospheric aerosols shape clouds, which can help cool the planet. Now, a new study finds that one promising strategy for understanding how aerosols and clouds interact can overestimate the cooling ability of pollution-generated clouds by up to 200 percent, researchers report in the Jan. 29 Science. “Clouds in general, and how aerosols interact with the climate, are a big uncertainty in climate models,” says Franziska Glassmeier, an atmospheric scientist at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. Scientists know that aerosols both natural, as from volcanoes, and human-caused, as from pollution can change a cloud’s thickness, ability to scatter sunlight or how much rainfall it produces. But these complicated physical effects are difficult to simulate, so scientists have sought real-world examples to study these effects.

Environmental News Network - Cooling Effect of Clouds Generated by Shipping Overestimated, Study Says

Aerosol particles cool the climate less than we thought

 E-Mail IMAGE: Clouds cool the climate system by reflecting incident sunlight. The reflection of sunlight and cooling is stronger in the presence of pollution particles. Pollution also affects the development of clouds: While. view more  Credit: Glassmeier et al The impact of atmospheric aerosols on clouds and climate may be different than previously thought. That is the conclusion of cloud researcher Franziska Glassmeier from TU Delft. The results of her study will be published in Science on Friday, January 29th. Clouds Cloud decks cover vast stretches of the subtropical oceans. They cool our planet because they reflect incoming sunlight back to space. Air pollution in the form of aerosols particles suspended in the atmosphere can increase this cooling effect because it makes clouds brighter. The cooling effect of pollution offsets part of the warming effect of greenhouse gases. How much exactly, is one of the largest uncertainties faced by climate scientists

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