Hurricane reduction through ocean surface cooling

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers around a project aimed at controlling hurricanes and its feasibility. While the project is not publicly funded, there is speculation about government interest due to potential benefits like reducing weather-related damage and using weather as a strategic tool. However, skepticism exists regarding the practicality of the proposed technology, particularly the "magic conduits" that would need to operate in deep water, which poses logistical and economic challenges. Environmental concerns are also highlighted, as altering ocean temperatures could disrupt marine ecosystems. The potential for blame if the technology fails during a hurricane is another significant concern, suggesting that the project may face considerable opposition and skepticism moving forward.
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Old article: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/08/28/hurricanes.gates.gray/

What do you guys think? Where do you see this project going? The official word is that it's not being publicly funded. But if there was even a 10% chance it would work, I see governments lining up at the possibility to control weather. To save billions of dollars in damage from weather. To use the weather against enemies.
 
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That is what the hurricane is for. To cool the ocean.
 
alchemical said:
Old article: http://edition.cnn.com/2009/TECH/science/08/28/hurricanes.gates.gray/

What do you guys think? Where do you see this project going? The official word is that it's not being publicly funded. But if there was even a 10% chance it would work, I see governments lining up at the possibility to control weather. To save billions of dollars in damage from weather. To use the weather against enemies.
I see it going to the same place as the project to build 1000 meter tall walls across the Midwest to stop tornadoes.

This article doesn't explain how these "magic conduits" push warm surface water down and bring colder, deeper water up from the bottom. Plus, to be effective at stopping the damage from a hurricane, the barges would have to be moored 100-200 miles offshore, which is all deep water. Not a place where mooring a vessel is economical.

And then the environmental types would grow concerned that all this colder water near the surface would damage the marine life which normally lives in the warm surface water. When communities wanted to put LNG gasification facilities offshore, that was the objection raised: that the heat extracted from the surrounding water used to gasify the LNG would disrupt the ecosystem, even though the affected area was limited and the temperature was reduced in this zone only a few degrees.
 
And the first time a hurricane is forecast for Gator Breath, Florida, they turn this thing on and it ends up hitting Miami, what do you think is going to happen? Even if it was just random and not this thing's fault?
 
Vanadium 50 said:
they turn this thing on and it ends up hitting Miami,

Or New Orleans.
 
There is no point to continuing this thread.
 
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