Comment AEC: The Antarctic Ice in not decreasing, but increasing. The local melting that has occurred is due to underground and undersea volcanoes. To pump salt water onto the ice sheets would of course speed up melting. The electricity to make trillions of tons of snow can only be created with nuclear or fossil fuels, more CO2.
Giant Antarctic ice sheet could be saved from ‘catastrophic meltdown’ by artificial snow
Metro Science ReporterWednesday 17 Jul 2019 7:01 pm
A giant Antarctic ice sheet could be saved from sliding into the sea and melting by covering it in trillions of tons of artificial snow. Scientists say the collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet – which would threaten many cities including New York with catastrophic flooding – may be prevented by snowing trillions of tons of ocean water onto it. They claim that pumping ocean water onto coastal regions surrounding parts of the ice sheet and converting it to snow may prevent its meltdown. But the project would need ‘unprecedented’ feats of engineering – including the installation of several thousand wind turbines in the inhospitable region. Researchers are analysing the feasibility of stabilising the ice sheet by generating trillions of tons of additional snow by pumping ocean water onto the glaciers and distributing it with snow cannons. They say the proposal would create a ‘substantial environmental hazard’ in one of the world’s last pristine regions – to prevent sea level rise for some of the world’s most densely populated areas.
Study co-author Professor Anders Levermann, of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) in Germany, said: ‘The fundamental trade-off is whether we as humanity want to sacrifice Antarctica to save the currently inhabited coastal regions and the cultural heritage that we have built and are building on our shores. ‘It is about global metropolises, from New York to Shanghai, which in the long term will be below sea level if nothing is done. ‘The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is one of the tipping elements in our climate system. Ice loss is accelerating and might not stop until the West Antarctic ice sheet is practically gone.’ He said warm ocean currents have reached the Amundsen Sea Sector of West Antarctica – a region comprising several glaciers that are prone to instability. Underwater melting of the glaciers triggered their speed-up and retreat. Prof Levermann said the process is already now responsible for the largest ice loss from the continent and provides an “accelerating contribution” to global sea level rise.
For the study, the researchers employed computer simulations to project the dynamic ice loss into the future. They confirmed earlier studies suggesting that even strong reduction of greenhouse gas emissions may not prevent the collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet. Study co-author Dr Johannes Feldmann, also of PIK, said: ‘We investigated what could stop a potential collapse in our simulations and increased the snowfall in the destabilised region far beyond observations. ‘In fact, we find that an awful lot of snow can indeed push the ice sheet back towards a stable regime and stop the instability. In practice, this could be realised by an enormous redisposition of water masses – pumped out of the ocean and snowed onto the ice sheet at a rate of several hundred billion tons per year over a few decades.’ He added: ‘We are fully aware of the disruptive character such an intervention would have. Uplifting, desalinating and heating the ocean water as well as powering the snow canons would require an amount of electric power in the order of several ten thousand high-end wind turbines. ‘Putting up such a wind farm and the further infrastructure in the Amundsen Sea and the massive extraction of ocean water itself would essentially mean losing a unique natural reserve. ‘Further, the harsh Antarctic climate makes the technical challenges difficult to anticipate and hard to handle while the potential hazardous impacts to the region are likely to be devastating.’
Categories: Allgemein
Lunacy rules!
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