Drone footage shows scientists using 'cloud brightening' to protect Great Barrier Reef
Record ID:
1638925
Drone footage shows scientists using 'cloud brightening' to protect Great Barrier Reef
- Title: Drone footage shows scientists using 'cloud brightening' to protect Great Barrier Reef
- Date: 27th September 2021
- Summary: COFFS HARBOUR, AUSTRALIA (RECENT - SEPTEMBER 20, 2021) (REUTERS) (SOUNDBITE) (English) SENIOR LECTURER AT NATIONAL MARINE SCIENCE CENTRE AT SOUTHERN CROSS UNIVERSITY AND CLOUD BRIGHTENING PROJECT LEADER, DR DANIEL HARRISON, SAYING: "So the idea of cloud brightening for the Reef is that when clouds form they can form with different brightnesses and this depends on how many tiny little particles there are in the atmosphere, each droplet needs a little particle, a cloud condensation nuclei to condense around and over the ocean, sometimes there's not very many, the air has very, very few. And naturally, these are often formed from sea salt crystals which have been made by breaking waves of the ocean so by pumping sea water and atomising it to these tiny nano-sized particles, then they can float up and brighten the clouds and reflect some of the sunlight away."
- Embargoed: 11th October 2021 11:19
- Keywords: Australia COP26 Great Barrier Reef Queensland United Nations Climate Change Conference climate climate change
- Location: BROADHURST REEF ON THE GREAT BARRIER REEF, COFFS HARBOUR, AUSTRALIA
- City: BROADHURST REEF ON THE GREAT BARRIER REEF, COFFS HARBOUR, AUSTRALIA
- Country: Australia
- Topics: Asia / Pacific,Australia,Climate Adaptation and Solution,Climate Change,Environment,General News
- Reuters ID: LVA002EWMT84B
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text:As a turbine sprays microscopic sea water particles across a section of Australia's Great Barrier Reef, researchers are using a technique known as 'cloud brightening' to protect vulnerable corals from bleaching.
Researchers working on the so-called Cloud Brightening project said they use a turbine to atomise sea water and blow it into the air to thicken existing clouds and reduce sunlight on the world's largest coral reef ecosystem located off Australia's northeast coast.
The water droplets evaporate leaving only tiny salt crystals which float up into the atmosphere allowing water vapour to condense around them, forming clouds, said Daniel Harrison, a senior lecturer at Southern Cross University, who runs the project.
The project had its second trial in March, the end of the Southern Hemisphere summer when the Reef off Australia's northeast is at its hottest, gathering valuable data on the atmosphere when corals are at most risk of bleaching.
"If we do it over an extended period of time for a few weeks to a couple of months when the corals are experiencing a marine heatwave we can actually start to lower the water temperature over the Reef," Harrison told Reuters.
"It's actually the light in the presence of the hot water that causes the coral to bleach. So by reducing just a small amount of light, about 6% or so of the average light over the summer, we can reduce about 50 to 60% of the bleaching stress on the corals."
But the benefits of cloud brightening would lessen over time unless other measures slowed the march of climate change, Harrison warned.
"Our modeling shows that very clearly, if we don't have strong action on climate change then cloud brightening can only help for a little while, eventually the effect that you can get from the clouds, it's limited and it just becomes overwhelmed by climate change after a couple of decades," he said.
One of Australia's best-known natural attractions, the Reef came close to being listed as an endangered World Heritage Site by the United Nations, although it avoided the designation following lobbying by Australia.
(Production: Stefica Nicol Bikes) - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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