REMINDER Professor Chris Field in conversation on the Climate Overshoot Commission report at the Healthy Planet Action Coalition meeting September 21, 4:30 PM EDT

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H simmens

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Sep 20, 2023, 9:48:07 AM9/20/23
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I am pleased to announce that Stanford Professor Chris Field, an advisor to the Climate Overshoot Commission (COC) will be our guest at the next Healthy Planet Action Coalition meeting this Thursday, September 21, at 4:30 PM EDT for 90 minutes. 

Mike MacCracken will moderate the conversation.


Access to previous HPAC meeting conversations can be found at
Healthyplanetaction.Org 

The Commission, a private entity sponsored by the Paris Peace Forum, has 12 members from all over the planet drawn mostly from those who previously held high-level governmental positions,  including several with strong backgrounds in climate change. 


Their previous Director Dr Jesse Reynolds spoke with HPAC in January. 





The COC report Reducing the Risks of Climate Overshoot was released on September 14. 





While the COC did not solicit public input it did hold a series of meetings to learn and discuss the full range of questions facing the international community in dealing with the risk of climate overshoot. 


Their 4-part high-level recommendations were summarized in the acronym CARE, for Cut (emissions), Adapt, Remove (CO2), and Explore (SRM).


Specifically, its recommendation on climate intervention advocated expanding research while placing "a moratorium on the deployment of solar radiation modification and large-scale outdoor experiments that would carry risk of significant transboundary harm." 


We look forward to getting a fuller understanding of their reasoning in discussion with Professor Field.


Chris Field is the Perry L. McCarty Director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment and the Melvin and Joan Lane Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies at Stanford University. 

Prior to his 2016 appointment at the Stanford Woods Institute, Field was a staff member at the Carnegie Institution for Science (1984-2002) and founding director of the Carnegie’s Department of Global Ecology (2002-2016). 

Field's research focuses on climate change, especially solutions that improve lives now, decrease the amount of future warming, and support vibrant economies. Recent projects emphasize decreasing risks from coastal flooding and wildfires. He has been deeply involved with national and international-efforts to advance understanding of global ecology and climate change. Field was co-chair of Working Group II of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2008-2015), where he led the effort on “Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation” (2012), and “Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability(2014). He was co-chair of the committee that produced the groundbreaking 2021 NASEM report that laid out a solar geoengineering (their term) research agenda.  He holds a bachelor’s degree in biology from Harvard College and a Ph.D. in biology from Stanford.
Please feel free to circulate this invitation to friends and colleagues. 

Herb

Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future
“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.com

rob...@rtulip.net

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Oct 4, 2023, 4:43:34 AM10/4/23
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The recording of the discussion with Professor Chris Field is at https://youtu.be/RATVY9v7vsI

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Peter Fiekowsky

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Oct 4, 2023, 12:18:47 PM10/4/23
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Herb or Michael- Thank you for the recording. I skimmed the video and couldn't find the meat. What were your two top take-aways from that 90 minute discussion?

Was there new information or a specific recommendation to a specific person or group coming out of the Overshoot Commission?

 

Peter

 

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Date: Wednesday, October 4, 2023 at 1:43 AM
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Subject: [HCA-list] RE: [geo] REMINDER Professor Chris Field in conversation on the Climate Overshoot Commission report at the Healthy Planet Action Coalition meeting September 21, 4:30 PM EDT

The recording of the discussion with Professor Chris Field is at https://youtu.be/RATVY9v7vsI

 

From: geoengi...@googlegroups.com <geoengi...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of H simmens
Sent: Wednesday, September 20, 2023 11:48 PM
To: geoengineering <geoengi...@googlegroups.com>; via NOAC Meetings <noac-m...@googlegroups.com>; healthy-planet-action-coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Climate Alliance <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [geo] REMINDER Professor Chris Field in conversation on the Climate Overshoot Commission report at the Healthy Planet Action Coalition meeting September 21, 4:30 PM EDT

 




I am pleased to announce that Stanford Professor Chris Field, an advisor to the Climate Overshoot Commission (COC) will be our guest at the next Healthy Planet Action Coalition meeting this Thursday, September 21, at 4:30 PM EDT for 90 minutes. 

 

Mike MacCracken will moderate the conversation.

 

 

Access to previous HPAC meeting conversations can be found at

Healthyplanetaction.Org 

 

The Commission, a private entity sponsored by the Paris Peace Forum, has 12 members from all over the planet drawn mostly from those who previously held high-level governmental positions,  including several with strong backgrounds in climate change. 

 

Their previous Director Dr Jesse Reynolds spoke with HPAC in January. 

 

 

 

 

The COC report Reducing the Risks of Climate Overshoot was released on September 14. 

 

 

 

 

While the COC did not solicit public input it did hold a series of meetings to learn and discuss the full range of questions facing the international community in dealing with the risk of climate overshoot. 

 

Their 4-part high-level recommendations were summarized in the acronym CARE, for Cut (emissions), Adapt, Remove (CO2), and Explore (SRM).

 

Specifically, its recommendation on climate intervention advocated expanding research while placing "a moratorium on the deployment of solar radiation modification and large-scale outdoor experiments that would carry risk of significant transboundary harm." 

 

We look forward to getting a fuller understanding of their reasoning in discussion with Professor Field.

 

Chris Field is the Perry L. McCarty Director of the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment and the Melvin and Joan Lane Professor for Interdisciplinary Environmental Studies at Stanford University. 

Prior to his 2016 appointment at the Stanford Woods Institute, Field was a staff member at the Carnegie Institution for Science (1984-2002) and founding director of the Carnegie’s Department of Global Ecology (2002-2016). 

Field's research focuses on climate change, especially solutions that improve lives now, decrease the amount of future warming, and support vibrant economies. Recent projects emphasize decreasing risks from coastal flooding and wildfires. He has been deeply involved with national and international-efforts to advance understanding of global ecology and climate change. Field was co-chair of Working Group II of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) (2008-2015), where he led the effort on “Managing the Risks of Extreme Events and Disasters to Advance Climate Change Adaptation” (2012), and “Climate Change 2014: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability(2014). He was co-chair of the committee that produced the groundbreaking 2021 NASEM report that laid out a solar geoengineering (their term) research agenda.  He holds a bachelor’s degree in biology from Harvard College and a Ph.D. in biology from Stanford.

Please feel free to circulate this invitation to friends and colleagues. 

 

Herb

 

Herb Simmens
Author of A Climate Vocabulary of the Future

“A SciencePoem and an Inspiration.” Kim Stanley Robinson
@herbsimmens
HerbSimmens.com

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Michael MacCracken

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Oct 4, 2023, 2:05:05 PM10/4/23
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Hi Peter--

I'd suggest (without consulting Herb):

1. This is the first international body of high decision-maker level officials (former government, NGO, etc.) to actually keep climate intervention (at least not dismiss) on the table as policy that may well be needed as mitigation, adaptation and CDR seem quite unlikely to be enough to prevent overshoot (which they held on to barely as still possible, likely mainly because they kept relying on the IPCC time-lagged global average metric for the amount of warming to date).

2. While there are scientific uncertainties about intervention, the most critical issues about intervention being used now have to do with ethical and social justice (and related) issues that need to be addressed in a convincing way.

Mike MacCracken

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