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Giant pipe and balloon to pump water into the sky in climate experiment

Field test by British academics marks first step towards recreating an artificial volcano that would inject particles into the stratosphere and cool the planet It sounds barmy, audacious or sci-fi: a tethered balloon the size of Wembley stadium suspended 20km above Earth, linked to the ground by a giant garden hose pumping hundreds of tonnes of minute chemical particles a day into the thin stratospheric air to refract sunlight and cool the planet. But a team of British academics will next month formally announce the first step towards creating an artificial volcano by going ahead with the world’s first major ” geo-engineering ” field-test in the next few months. The ultimate aim is to mimic the cooling effect that volcanoes have when they inject particles into the stratosphere that bounce some of the Sun’s energy back into space, so preventing it from warming the Earth and mitigating the effects of man-made climate change. Before the full-sized system can be deployed, the research team will test a scaled-down version of the balloon-and-hose design. Backed by a £1.6m government grant and the Royal Society , the team will send a balloon to a height of 1km over an undisclosed location. It will pump nothing more than water into the air, but it will allow climate scientists and engineers to gauge the engineering feasibility of the plan. Ultimately, they aim to test the impact of sulphates and other aerosol particles if they are sprayed directly into the stratosphere. If the technical problems posed by controlling a massive balloon at more than twice the cruising height of a commercial airliner are resolved, then the team from Cambridge, Oxford, Reading and Bristol universities expect to move to full-scale solar radiation tests. The principal investigator, Matthew Watson , a former UK government scientific adviser on emergencies and now a Bristol University lecturer, says the experiment is inspired by volcanoes and the way they can affect the climate after eruptions. “We will test pure water only, in sufficient quantity to test the engineering. Much more research is required,” he said, in answer the question of what effect a planetary-scale deployment of the technology could have. Other leaders of the government-funded Stratospheric particle injection for climate engineering (Spice) project have investigated using missiles, planes, tall chimneys and other ways to send thousands of tonnes of particles into the air but have concluded that a simple balloon and hosepipe system is the cheapest. The research is paid for by the government-funded Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. “The whole weight of this thing is going to be a few hundred tonnes. That’s the weight of several double-decker buses. So imagine how big a helium balloon do you need to hold several double-decker buses – a big balloon. We’re looking at a balloon which is possibly 100-200m in diameter. It’s about the same size as Wembley stadium,” said the Oxford engineering lecturer Hugh Hunt in an interview earlier this year . “This hose would be just like a garden hose, 20km long and we pump stuff up the pipe. The nice thing about it is that we can really have a knob, if you like, which we can control to adjust the rate at which we inject these particles.” While the October experiment is expected to have no impact on the atmosphere, it could also be used to try out “low-level cloud whitening”, a geo-engineering proposal backed financially by Microsoft chairman and philanthropist Bill Gates. In this case, fine sea salt crystals would be pumped up and sprayed into the air to increase the number of droplets and the reflectivity in clouds. Together, many droplets are expected to diffuse sunlight and make a cloud whiter. However, environment groups in Britain and the US said the government’s experiment was a dangerous precedent for a full-scale deployment that could affect rainfall and food supplies. Even if the approach successfully cools the planet by bouncing some of the Sun’s energy back into space, it would do nothing for the build up of CO 2 in the atmosphere, which leads to increased ocean acidity . “What is being floated is not only a hose but the whole idea of geo-engineering the planet. This is a huge waste of time and money and shows the UK government’s disregard for UN processes. It is the first step in readying the hardware to inject particles into the stratosphere. It has no other purpose and it should not be allowed to go ahead,” said Pat Mooney, chair of ETC Group in California, an NGO that supports socially responsible development of technology. Mike Childs, head of science, policy and research at Friends of the Earth UK , said: “We are going to have to look at new technologies which could suck CO 2 out of the air. But we don’t need to do is invest in harebrained schemes to reflect sunlight into space when we have no idea at all what impact this may have on weather systems around the globe.” But the principle of large-scale geoengineering has been backed strongly by Sir Martin Rees, the former president of Royal Society, which in 2009 concluded in a report that it may be necessary to have a “plan B” if governments could not reduce emissions. “Nothing should divert us from the main priority of reducing global greenhouse gas emissions. But if such reductions achieve too little, too late, there will surely be pressure to consider a ‘plan B’ – to seek ways to counteract the climatic effects of greenhouse gas emissions by ‘geoengineering’,” said Rees. Members of the British public who were consulted by researchers in advance of the Spice experiment were broadly sceptical. “Overall almost all of our participants were willing to entertain the notion that the test-bed as an engineering test – a research opportunity – should be pursued. Equally, very few were fully comfortable with the notion of stratospheric aerosols as a response to climate change,” the Cardiff University-based researchers concluded. Geo-engineering Climate change Climate change Physics Meteorology John Vidal guardian.co.uk

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Coral from Australia’s Great Barrier Reef has yielded a compound that could put a lot of sunscreen makers out of business. Researchers discovered that algae living in the coral created a compound that acts as a sunscreen to protect both the algae and the coral from the sun’s rays. They…

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We want your Mercury prize 2011 reviews

Listen to all the albums on the Mercury prize shortlist 2011 – and when you’re done, why not post a review? Have you tried your hand at writing an album review for us yet? If not, here’s the perfect excuse to get started, and if you have, well, why not do another? With the Mercury Music Prize ceremony less than a week away, we’d like to hear your thoughts on the contenders. Using the players below you can listen to each of the ten shortlisted albums, and, should you fancy it, submit a review on the album page – simply click on the album’s link and you’ll be taken to a dedicated album page where you can post a review. We’ll be keeping an eye on submissions, and the best reviews will be rounded up on the blog in the next few days. And what’s more, we’ll be awarding a Mercury-related prize for the very best review we see. Metronomy – The English Riviera Joe Mount and co’s third album is summery and melancholic in equal measure, and their most accessible to date. Adele – 21 Adele has won plaudits for the maturity of this follow-up to 19, which spawned the massively successful Someone Like You. Everything Everything – Man Alive Manchester quartet throw everything and the kitchen sink at this confident, energetic debut. Ghostpoet – Peanut Butter Blues & Melancholy Jam Mike Skinner’s favourite MC’s bedroom-produced debut matches sharp lyrics with a deceptively sleepy delivery to promising effect. Anna Calvi – Anna Calvi Eno-approved singer-songwriter has produced what the Guardian described as “a fiery concoction of flamenco guitars, operatic vocals and gothic stylings”. Tinie Tempah – Disc-Overy Scunthorpe-avoiding rapper’s star is very much in the ascendant, but is Disc-Overy Mercury-winning material? Elbow – Build a Rocket Boys! 2008 Mercury winners continue to win hearts and minds with their fifth album. Gwilym Simcock – Good Days at Schloss Elmau (Listen here at Grooveshark ) Easily derided as this year’s token jazz effort, classically trained Simcock is considered by those in the know to be an enormously gifted musician who, with this solo work, transcends genre and defies classification. So there. James Blake – James Blake Coffee table dubstep from the Deptford-based producer. PJ Harvey – Let England Shake PJ tries to avoid going over old ground and succeeds wildly. Katy B – On a Mission Credible dance-pop debut from the BRIT school graduate it’s OK to like. King Creosote & John Hopkins – Diamond Mine Much-loved Domino artists collaborate on a seven years in the making “soundtrack to a romanticised version of a life lived in a Scottish coastal village”. Mercury prize 2011 Mercury prize Katy B Adele PJ Harvey James Blake Gwilym Simcock Ghostpoet Elbow King Creosote Everything Everything Anna Calvi Metronomy Tinie Tempah Adam Boult guardian.co.uk

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In the billionaires’ retreat of Porto Cervo on Sardinia, burglars are causing sleepless nights for some rich families—and soporific ones for others. Police say thieves who are apparently pumping sleeping gas into homes before breaking in robbed at least two homes on the island last week, making off with…

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The cash-strapped federal government needs all the revenue it can get–but that hasn’t stopped some companies from doing their utmost to reduce their tax bills. A new study finds that at least 25 major U.S. firms paid less in corporate taxes last year than they paid their CEO, the New York Times reports. Among the

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A Texas judge has blocked a controversial anti-abortion law requiring women to have a sonogram before they can abort a fetus. Judge Sam Sparks let stand the sonogram demand, but shot down the requirement that a physician verbally describe images revealed by an ultrasound. He ruled that the requirement violated…

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Wootton Bassett lowers flag for last time as repatriations move to Brize Norton

Spontaneous honouring of funeral corteges of soldiers killed in Afghanistan and Iraq became famous across the world As always, the regulars started turning up many hours earlier than they needed to. Kevin Dunn took time off from his window-cleaning round to stake his place on Wootton Bassett high street, as he had scores of times before. In his bright beret, former paratrooper Dave Soane was easily spotted near the war memorial, greeting old comrades and friends. The town’s councillors were out explaining patiently once again – and perhaps for the last time – how over the past four years this modest Wiltshire town has become such a focus for the nation’s grief. Since 2007 Bassett, as it is known to the locals, has ground to a halt whenever the bodies of British service personnel are driven down the high street after being repatriated through nearby RAF Lyneham. Townspeople and, at the height of the conflict in Afghanistan , thousands of visitors have stood with bereaved families to watch corteges pass through en route to a hospital in Oxfordshire. From Thursday the bodies will be flown into RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire instead. To mark the occasion – which comes on the eve of military job cuts – the union flag next to the war memorial in Wootton Bassett high street is being lowered for the final time at sunset on Wednesday. It will be handed over to the people of Carterton, where it will be hoisted in a new memorial garden near Brize Norton. David Cameron sent a “heartfelt thank-you” to Wootton Bassett. “I think they have done a magnificent job. What happened at Wootton Bassett was spontaneous. It was a very beautiful thing.” The Wootton Bassett phenomenon has been extraordinary. “Repats”, as everyone here calls them, were switched from Brize Norton to Lyneham because repairs had to be made to the runway of the base in Oxfordshire. The then mayor was out shopping with his wife when someone from the town council ran out to tell him that a cortege was coming through. He dashed home put on his mayoral robes and stood to attention as the body was driven through. Over the next weeks and months more and more townspeople became aware and involved. Shopkeepers began shutting up when funeral cars came through. Members of the local branch of the Royal British Legion began to turn out with their standards, which they lowered as cars went through. Then friends and families began to join the growing crowds. It became customary for bereaved relatives – if they wished – to join the crowds in Bassett after receiving the bodies of their loved ones in a chapel at Lyneham. Many placed flowers on the cars, some applauded as the cars passed. “It began as a very small affair with just a few dozen people turning out,” said the current mayor, Paul Heaphy. “It grew into something huge.” There was a time, Heaphy admits, when there was a fear the Wootton Bassett repat days had become too big. “In 2009 when casualties were coming back in horrific numbers the world’s media caught hold of it and we were accused of being ghoulish and turning the whole thing into a circus. But it was always just about paying respect to the fallen and giving the families the support we could.” The final repatriation – the 167th – took place on 18 August when the town bore witness to the return of the body of 24-year-old Daniel Clack, who was killed by a roadside bomb in Helmand. Heaphy does not know if similar scenes will be repeated in Oxfordshire. “It would be wrong to tell people they ought to go there. Some will go, others will not.” One of those who will not be going to Oxfordshire is former mayor Percy Miles, whose spontaneous tribute started the phenomenon. “I was amazed it became such a huge thing. Bassett has done wonders over the years. I didn’t go to all of them because it hurt too much and I won’t go to Brize Norton for the same reason. I get too emotional about it all. I feel strongly we shouldn’t be out in Afghanistan in the first place.” Miles will not even be going to the sunset ceremony. “I’m bowing out, leaving it to others,” he said. Most expressed mixed emotions – pride at what Wootton Bassett had achieved, sadness that it will no longer be able to offer the support it has – and some relief that the baton had been passed on. After the ceremony the town council will begin planning for one last set-piece when it is accorded royal status in October for the way it has honoured the fallen. Anne Bevis, the repatriation liaison officer for Wootton Bassett Royal British Legion, said: “The sunset ceremony will bring closure to us. It is quite sad, but I think it’s time for someone else to be able to show their respects from another part of the country. They have a different aspect, a completely different route, a different layout and they can do it their way and really it will still be the same, it will still be a tribute to the boys and girls that have paid the ultimate price.” Military Afghanistan Steven Morris guardian.co.uk

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Alistair Darling memoir to reveal rifts with ‘brutal’ Gordon Brown

Former chancellor’s book reportedly charts breakdown in relationship with Brown, and accuses former PM of trying to undermine him at the Treasury Tensions at the top of government and the Bank of England during the 2008 financial crisis are to be laid bare in a forthcoming memoir by Alistair Darling, the former chancellor who served under Gordon Brown, according to the website Labour Uncut . Darling’s book charts the breakdown of his relationship with Brown and accuses the former prime minister of attempting to undermine him at the Treasury, according to the website. The book also reportedly describes the Bank of England governor, Mervyn King, as “amazingly stubborn and exasperating”. Darling, now a backbench MP, recounts how the Labour government considered sacking King in 2008, but backed down when they couldn’t find a suitable alternative. Brown’s demeanour was increasingly “brutal and volcanic”, mistrusting Darling to the extent that he repeatedly tried to place his own aides in the Treasury ministerial team to report back on what the chancellor was doing, according to the website. Darling also writes about his widely rumoured confrontation with the prime minister in 2009 when Brown tried to sack him and offer him another role in cabinet, which he refused, making clear he would rather walk out of government than do any other job. He reportedly casts Ed Balls, now shadow chancellor, as a key lieutenant of Brown running what amounted to a shadow Treasury operation within the government. Such claims would prove embarrassing for Balls, just three months after leaked internal Labour documents gave documentary proof of the roles played by Balls and Ed Miliband in the operation to unseat Tony Blair when he was prime minister. The book is due to be published next week. Alistair Darling Gordon Brown Politics past Economic policy Mervyn King Bank of England Hélène Mulholland guardian.co.uk

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Twelve men and three women were arrested Tuesday after a headscarf ban at a New York theme park angered some of the 3,000 Muslims celebrating the end of Ramadan at the facility. The New York Daily News says a woman who was seeking a refund after she learned of the ban began arguing with the

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Private employers added fewer jobs in August than in July, a new survey found. The news likely will tamp down expectations for the official jobs report, due out from the government Friday. The payroll processor ADP reported that private employers added 91,000 jobs last month. That’s down from a revised gain of 109,000 jobs in

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