Project Syndicate: A Climate Silver Bullet?

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Alan Robock

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Sep 29, 2019, 8:28:53 AM9/29/19
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https://www.project-syndicate.org/bigpicture/a-climate-silver-bullet

In this Big Picture, David Keith, a professor of applied physics at Harvard, argues that foregoing debate and research on climate geoengineering now could increase the risk of future misuse. But Karin Nansen of Friends of the Earth International contends that advocacy for carbon capture and related technologies has become a “charade” through which entrenched interests can keep profiting from an unsustainable status quo. And in so doing, warns François Martel of the Pacific Islands Development Forum, they are threatening the very survival of low-lying island countries.

Making matters worse, Silvia Ribeiro of the ETC Group points out that geoengineering technologies could actually pose additional risks, given that they are designed to alter climate conditions on a massive scale, yet remain largely untested. Former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon thus sees an urgent need for international standards governing the experimentation and use of such measures. And Barbara Unmüssig of the Heinrich Böll Foundation says that any global regulatory regime must include outright bans on the most politically and socially disruptive geoengineering methods.

-- 
Alan

Alan Robock, Distinguished Professor
  Associate Editor, Reviews of Geophysics
Department of Environmental Sciences             Phone: +1-848-932-5751
Rutgers University                    E-mail: rob...@envsci.rutgers.edu
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Stephen Salter

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Sep 29, 2019, 11:12:21 AM9/29/19
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Hi All

There may be some confusion between  long term sulphur in the stratosphere and short term sea salt in the troposphere.

None of the people in Alan Robock's list have ever asked me for information about marine cloud brightening.  If they had I would have sent them a paper with the page below showing the results from nine leading climate models of increasing the concentration of condensation nuclei in ocean regions with low cloud by 50%.  This is much more intelligent that other computer studies that I could mention. They look beneficial and might even be further improved with an informed choice of times and seasons for treatment.  A precipitation increase of a few percent of a very low amount may not be a great help but temperature reductions of 2K in the Arctic would be especially welcome.


The suggestion that marine cloud brightening can affect precipitation patterns is true in the sense that rotating a steering wheel can affect the direction of travel of a road vehicle. This is usually desirable if the rotations are chosen by a licensed driver.

The suggestion that research into climate engineering could distract progress on carbon reductions is on a par with the policy of not issuing parachutes to the Royal Flying Corps in World War I because it would 'impair their fighting spirit'. This was official policy until America entered the war in 1917.

Stephen

Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design. School of Engineering, University of Edinburgh, Mayfield Road, Edinburgh EH9 3DW, Scotland S.Sa...@ed.ac.uk, Tel +44 (0)131 650 5704, Cell 07795 203 195, WWW.homepages.ed.ac.uk/shs, YouTube Jamie Taylor Power for Change
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