Potential Energy

Iceland Volcano Won't Cool the Planet

The emissions are too small, so far, to slow global warming.

Kevin Bullis 04/16/2010

  • 13 Comments

Advocates of "geoengineering"--proposed approaches to cool the planet to offset the effects of greenhouse gases--point to major volcanic eruptions as evidence that the techniques could work. Very large eruptions, like the one at Mount Pinatube in 1991, actually did cool the planet by injecting sulfates into the upper reaches of the atmosphere, where they circulated for over a year, shading the earth. Such advocates have been hoping that another major eruption would come along that could be studied for clues on how best go about artificially cooling the planet.

The eruptions of Iceland's Eyjafjallajökull volcano, while impressive and large enough to shut down air traffic in Europe, don't fit the bill. Here's what Alan Robock, a professor of environmental studies at Rutgers University, who has studied the impact of volcanoes on climate, told me:

So far the volcano has only put out less than 0.004 Mt of SO2, compared to the 20 Mt that the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo eruption injected into the stratosphere. Furthermore, the Icelandic emission was only into the lower atmosphere, where the lifetime is on the order of one week, as opposed to a couple years in the stratosphere. So too little, and staying in the atmosphere for too short a time. So far.

To make an impact globally, the volcano would have to erupt much more violently (or perhaps trigger nearby volcanoes to erupt violently) so that the larger amounts of sulfates would reach the stratosphere and stay in place, he says. To follow the size of eruptions at the volcano, click here.

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cobrasixtysix

14 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Sign me up 4 a Cool Volcano

Volcanos have never been much good at cooling anything really, not exactly spewing out ice crystals are they.. global warming, swarming or is it cooling? dang we cant make up out minds, lets call it climate change to be safe, what a con.

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neilrieck

67 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Re: Sign me up 4 a Cool Volcano

Volcanoes that spew lots of CO2 will contribute to the greenhouse effect (increase heating). Volcanoes that spew lots of sulfur dioxide can (if the gas gets high enough) create reflective clouds which will increase cooling.

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neilrieck

67 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Is this the same one as 1783?

In 1783, Benjamin Franklin was living in France and wrote about "the year without a summer". This lack of a summer was due to an active volcano in Iceland. (might be a different volcano but most likely caused by the same geological event (separation of two continental plates)). Anyway, according to Franklin, food production was affected for 18 months and many people starved.

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dmcc

1 Comment

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Re: Is this the same one as 1783?

No, it is not.  That one was Laki.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laki

Laki is also NOT the volcano that has, for the last millennium or so, erupted whenever the current volcano has erupted.  That volcano is Katla.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katla

Katla can be bad news for Iceland. 

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neilrieck

67 Comments

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Re: Is this the same one as 1783?

Thanks for this. I didn't know that someone had identified the volcano mentioned by Franklin. On a related note, all the volcanoes of Iceland, as well as the island of Iceland, were created by the same geological event (the separation of two continental plates) which tends to causes them to release similar gases.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volcanism_in_Iceland

Iceland's plates are tearing apart and the Earth's core flows upward to fill the gap. Almost all volcanoes are at the intersection of two colliding plates, or two separating plates.

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FRANKOK

18 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Cooling or Heating?

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dcmeserve

175 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Re: Cooling or Heating?

"Wait a minute - were not the so-called scientists in the 70's screaming about an ice age..."

No, *journalists* were talking about an ice age.  Not scientists.

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SHD

2 Comments

  • 659 Days Ago
  • 04/19/2010

Re: Cooling or Heating?

You really wanted to say *politicians*, didn't you?

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neilrieck

67 Comments

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Re: Cooling or Heating?

According to this free online book:

http://www.aip.org/history/climate/Public.htm

The media jumped the gun when presented with cooling data from climate researchers. It turned out that cooling was only observed in North America and it was caused by industrial pollution. You can read/download the whole book from here:
http://www.aip.org/history/climate/index.html

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cloudmaster101

5 Comments

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Volcanic gas spewed from volcanic eruptions do help cool the planet. However this process leads to acid rain causing more problems than fixing a single problem.

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samdutton

3 Comments

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Less flights = less emissions

Has the huge number of cancelled flights made a significant difference?

Reply

mkogrady

423 Comments

  • 658 Days Ago
  • 04/20/2010

Plate Shifts

By chance are the Icelandic Volcano's located over the ancient hot spot or plume that caused the huge eruptions in Russia about 250 million years ago? When the continental plates drift, the old hot spots remains somewhat fixed - true?

The next mass extinction may have started.....and we're on the menu for the great big BBQ.

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propalo

3 Comments

  • 573 Days Ago
  • 07/14/2010

profit from bad event

We, Manhood, usually swallow consequences of natural catastrophes without any argue. I was trained to take advantage of every lost.
I want to learn possibilities to prevent or ease an impact of volcano eruption consequences and maybe use the giant amounts of energy enclosed inside.
The help I need is information about quantity of energy, lava mass, pressure, temperature inside of volcano and Internet sources of information. 
Thank you

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Bio

Kevin Bullis is Technology Review’s energy editor.

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