The recording of the HPAC conversation today with Dr Peter D. Ward on Sea Level Change is at https://youtu.be/YjwacAjHsHU
This discussion covers vital information for Earth’s future.
Dr Ward’s slides are temporarily here.
Participant comments included input from sea level expert Dr John Englander as well as dialogue on the potential of solar geoengineering to mitigate sea level rise.
Dr Peter Ward is Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Washington. He is co-author of the influential book Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe, and is a leading expert on the causes of mass extinctions (see his TED talk, my review of Under a Green Sky).
Robert Tulip
https://www.healthyplanetaction.org/
Healthy Planet Action Coalition
Those who look at the real world evidence of climate sensitivity in the past, like Peter Ward and a small handful of us, are much more alarmed than the vast multitude of climate scientists who only look at predictions from incomplete and inaccurate models! And infinitely more worried than the majority who are culturally inoculated against facts and reason!
That’s the real problem, almost nobody cares, even if they understand. Their “leaders” are worse. No government or international agency accepts responsibility for sea level rise adaptation, only disaster response.
During Covid essentially all the funding that had been allocated for beach protection vanished because nobody went to the beach, so politicians divvied it all up to pet political constituencies, and never allocated more.
Erosion never sleeps, politicians and funding agencies never wake up!
To see real results of we grow back severely eroded beaches at record rates by regenerating coral reefs, oyster reefs, saltmarshes, seagrasses, and mangroves, while greatly increasing Blue Carbon removal, please see:
Biorock® Technology for Climate Proofing Beaches, Regenerating Marine Ecosystems, Sustainable Mariculture, Blue Carbon sequestration, climate change adaptation, and producing cheaper and harder carbon-neutral or carbon-negative building materials in the sea.
Side Event at the United Nations Ocean Conference, Lisbon, Portugal, June 30 2022 by Dr. Tom Goreau, Chief Scientist, Blue Regeneration
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wDwCsxx4Q8
Best wishes,
Tom
Thomas J. F. Goreau, PhD
President, Global Coral Reef Alliance
Chief Scientist, Blue Regeneration SL
President, Biorock Technology Inc.
Technical Advisor, Blue Guardians Programme, SIDS DOCK
37 Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA 02139
gor...@globalcoral.org
www.globalcoral.org
Skype: tomgoreau
Tel: (1) 617-864-4226 (leave message)
Books:
Geotherapy: Innovative Methods of Soil Fertility Restoration, Carbon Sequestration, and Reversing CO2 Increase
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466595392
Innovative Methods of Marine Ecosystem Restoration
http://www.crcpress.com/product/isbn/9781466557734
Geotherapy: Regenerating ecosystem services to reverse climate change
No one can change the past, everybody can change the future
It’s much later than we think, especially if we don’t think
Those with their heads in the sand will see the light when global warming and sea level rise wash the beach away
“When you run to the rocks, the rocks will be melting, when you run to the sea, the sea will be boiling”, Peter Tosh, Jamaica’s greatest song writer
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Dear Peter
Thank you very much for your superb presentation and discussion.
Our community of interest in HPAC supports the triad of direct climate cooling, GHG removal and emission reduction.
One of the themes that arose in the discussion on your information on the likelihood of severe impacts from sea level rise is that nothing we can do about carbon can affect the risk of several metres of SLR this century, destroying all low lying coastal infrastructure and agriculture, but there is significant potential for albedo increase to mitigate the rate of inundation. Increasing planetary reflectivity would require concerted attention to the safety and feasibility of various methods proposed, which unfortunately are the object of strong disinformation campaigns.
This point about albedo potential has not been adequately appreciated in policy discussions, especially regarding the security and misery impacts.
Your slide 42 linked in my email below provides estimates of effectiveness, timeliness, safety and affordability for main climate interventions. I don’t think it is at all accurate as regards efforts to deal with sea level rise, given the primary role of albedo in mitigation potential.
Your suggestion to engage on advocacy is very welcome, for example finding media willing to cover this important topic, sharing well-crafted messages. One theme we are discussing is the need to rebrighten the world, as discussed at rebrighten.org.
Best Regards
From: Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 10:53 AM
To: rob...@rtulip.net
Cc: Healthy Planet Action Coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; geoengineering <geoengi...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Climate Alliance <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>; JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
Thank you all for your attention and you patience in my many areas of ignorance especially about engineering. I learned a great deal and want to help going forward.
I will write an Op Ed. I hope it is of quality that you will sign on. We need to do more. I need to do more
Hi RobertT
This was one of the best sessions we've had. Thanks so much for setting it up.
As regards your comments below, can you point me to where in the recording either David or Peter said that there was significant potential for albedo increase to mitigate the rate of inundation. When I asked the direct question as to what, from an Earth Science perspective, could be done to relieve SLR, my recollection is that neither offered an answer. I came away with the strong impression that they were saying that significant SLR is already baked in and there is absolutely nothing, including SRM, that can be done in the short to medium term to arrest it. This interpretation might just be a perfect example of confirmation bias on my part, so I'd really like to get this point clear.
Perhaps in response to this message, either
Peter or David could clarify. The question is, from an Earth
Sciences perspective and ignoring engineering, economic and
political dimensions, what could now be done to stop or reverse
the SLR that is already in train?
Robert
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The thermal coefficient of expansion of seawater is about half at a depth of 1,000 meter it is at the surface per the following graphic.

Heat moved into deep water to a median depth of 500 meters with Thermodynamic Geoengineering using heat pipes that overcome buoyancy, produces 25% less sea level rise due to thermal expansion. And this heat would be unavailable to melt icecaps, or the glaciers that accounted for the 21% of the recorded sea level rise of the past two decades.
As Peter and John’s talk advises and Mike points out, the big risk is from icesheet melting rather the current situation. Kevin Trenberth advises at 14ZJ of annual warming the ocean is warming 0.0024 C per year or 0.02 per decade, or 0.02 per year for the top 500 m or so, or 0.2 per year for the top 5 m or so.
Robert C at about an hour .05 claims shifting heat within the climate system is a crazy notion.
On the contrary. If the top 5m is warming 100 times faster than at a depth of 1000 meters, we are crazy not moving surface heat into the deeper water. Particularly when you can do this by shifting the surface heat through a heat engine that produces energy. And even crazier still when you can do this cheaper than burning fossil fuels. And crazier still when this would reverse the offgassing of CO2 from the ocean to the atmosphere and in fact reverse this process and sequesters about 4.3 gigatons atmospheric CO2 in the ocean. And at no cost for the CDR.
Furthermore the heat you shift will be back at the surface in about 226 years at which time you can recycle it again to produce more work. In total 13 times. And the waste heat of those conversion is dissipated to space as Robert C acknowledges is the only way the heat of warming can completely removed from the total atmosphere/ocean system. Which is a approach that would be enhanced in an environment where you are no longer creating emissions and have instead allowed the legacy emissions to dissipate to space over the course of about 3000 years.
Enjoyed this discussion. It was one of the best yet.
Best
Jim
Robert Chris at about 1:05 claims shifting heat within the planetary system is a crazy notion.
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Hi John,
I am very sorry indeed to have missed the HPAC meeting yesterday; I look forward to seeing the recording.
Thanks for the diagram. The cause/effect relationship is not at all obvious for CO2 and temperature; but the sea level should be the effect of temperature. (This is not clear from the graph – if anything, the sea level change seems to precede temperature change). Note that the sea level dipped following the eruption of Toba around 70 kya and didn’t fall as low again until the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) about 20 kya.
I have argued that, without SRM to halt and reverse global warming and various tipping processes, we are almost certainly committed to the disintegration of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GIS) and the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) giving 15+ metres of sea level rise between them. And, unless a rapid collapse of GIS diverts AMOC and starts an ice age, we are likely committed to 60+ as the rest of the Antarctic ice melts away. Thus SRM is absolutely vital to prevent catastrophic sea level rise.
Hansen warned of the under-considered danger from sea level rise in 2015 [1] and I contributed to the discussion of Eemian events in his subsequent paper published in an open-access journal (see underlined). Hansen responded to my contribution [2]; his dismissal of geoengineering is inexplicable (see extract).
We understand that Hansen is writing a piece on “sea level rise in the pipeline” to warn of a commitment to many metres of sea level rise on our current course. One wonders whether this time he will come into the open about the need for SRM.
Cheers, John
[1] Climate & Capitalism (2015)
James Hansen: Sea level disaster ahead, but when?
https://climateandcapitalism.com/2015/07/27/james-hansen-sea-level-disaster-ahead-but-when/
In 2005 I argued that ice sheets may be more vulnerable than IPCC (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change) estimated, mainly because of effects of a warming ocean in speeding ice melt. In 2007 I wrote “Scientific Reticence and Sea Level Rise”, describing and documenting a phenomenon that pressures scientists to minimize the danger of imminent sea level rise.
About then I became acquainted with remarkable studies of geologist Paul Hearty. Hearty found strong evidence for sea level rise late in the Eemian to +6-9 m (20-30 feet) relative to today. The Eemian is the prior interglacial period (~120,000 years ago), which was slightly warmer than the present interglacial period (the Holocene) in which civilization developed. Hearty also found evidence for powerful storms in the North Atlantic near the end of the Eemian period.
It seemed that an understanding of the late Eemian climate events might be helpful in assessing the climate effects of human-made global warming, as Earth is now approaching the warmth that existed then. Thus several colleagues and I initiated global climate simulations aimed at trying to understand what happened at the end of the Eemian and its relevance to climate change today.
More than eight years later, we are publishing a paper describing these studies. We are publishing the paper in an open-access “Discussion” journal, which allows the paper to become public while undergoing peer-review (a pdf of the paper with figures imbedded in the text for easier reading is available (here).
[2] Hansen (2015)
Response to SC C6300: ‘Reducing the risks from devastating sea level rise through an improved understanding of Earth System operation in past and present’, John Nissen,
28 Aug 2015
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/15/C7951/2015/acpd-15-C7951-2015.pdf
As for geoengineering to adjust the albedo of the Arctic, that is an attack on a climate
feedback. The task now is to address the climate forcing. When you find yourself in a
hole, the first rule is “stop digging”.
This graph — just updated — may be of interest to those on the great call last evening. Feel free to use.--It shows the long term correlation of CO2, temperature, and sea level.As pointed out last evening, we would have to get CO2 down to the level of 280 ppm or less, to keep SL from rising. Even without human affect, at the last “high water mark” 122,000 years ago, SL was some 7 meters above present.
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On Mar 8, 2024, at 6:04 PM, John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com> wrote:
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The graphs simply reflect the fact that surface temperature rise lags behind CO2 rise (the 1500 year mixing time of the deep ocean determines the long tail of the response), so we have only seen the first part of the transient response, and will not feel the full warming until the ocean has turned over a couple of times. Sea level rise lags much, much longer, to reach a steady state even after all CO2 change stops.
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Hi Herb and Tom,
As regards Hansen’s position, Herb, it has changed and he is now supporting SRM to counter global warming. In my response to Hansen’s paper in 2015 I was arguing that SRM was most urgently needed because of tipping processes in the Arctic where positive feedback is already in play. Hansen’s response was inexplicable in that he seemed to imply that SRM should not be used to counter feedback! It seems his focus is still on global effects, ignoring the tipping processes in the Arctic which so desperately urgently need to be halted and reversed to prevent catastrophic climate change and sea level rise. The urgency for SRM deployment with the most powerful cooling techniques for refreezing the Arctic is simply missing, I feel. But then that urgency is also missing for SRM advocates like David Keith and Doug MacMartin.
As regards temperature following CO2 or vice versa, it is not at all clear from John’s diagram because the changes in temperature and CO2 are so well synchronised over the past 400 thousand years. The consensus of scientists in the IPCC and including Hansen, have worked on the assumption that temperature follows CO2. They make a further assumption that the planet has been in thermal equilibrium, such that temperature rise is proportional to GHG emissions rather than to the level of GHGs in the atmosphere. Thus the models produce temperature projections which vary enormously according to the emissions scenario.
But I believe that CO2 has followed temperature in the past. I believe that the planet is far from equilibrium such that temperature rise is proportional to the level of GHGs in the atmosphere. Thus the IPCC models are producing wildly incorrect temperature projections. I don’t think that annual emissions make much difference to the forcing except that the decarbonisation is reducing SO2 cooling and leading to even more rapid warming, as Hansen warned in his “Faustian Bargain” paper. So I am with Hansen on this.
In researching whether temperature follows CO2, I looked into the Azolla event around 49 million years ago, which reduced the atmospheric CO2 level dramatically [1]. There was not a corresponding dramatic fall in global temperature as one would expect if temperature followed CO2. On the other hand, the formation of the Antarctic ice cap around 35.4 million years ago caused the global temperature to drop dramatically.
Independent of the Azolla event, there is the theory that in the past 50 million years mountain forming took CO2 out of the atmosphere to produce the gradual cooling until the formation of ice caps first in Antarctica and then much later in the Arctic. However this gradual cooling could be an effect of snow forming on the peaks of the mountains thrust up by movement of tectonic plates. I have never heard this alternative explanation discussed.
The assumption that temperature follows CO2 has been used by Hansen and others to calculate the equilibrium climate sensitivity: the temperature which would be eventually reached if the CO2e level was held constant, as we might expect when net zero emissions is achieved. The IPCC has taken a value of ~3°C (2.5°C to 4°Cin AR6, see [2]) for a doubling of CO2e while Hansen has recently estimated it as between 6°C and 10°C, with 4°C likely by 2100.
If we take the opposite assumption, that CO2 follows temperature (as we see with Pinatubo cooling taking 20 GtCO2 out of the atmosphere), then we could be far from the equilibrium point. In this case, the rate of temperature rise is proportional to the net forcing of greenhouse gases less SO2 cooling. PRAG has produced a graph to show this, see attached. It shows the doubling of the rate of temperature rise from 0.18°C to 0.36°C per decade as predicted by Hansen.
The PRAG graph needs to be clarified by showing that the risk of tipping processes becoming irreversible above 1.5°C is on the assumption of maximum SRM cooling being applied. Without SRM, the risk of them being irreversible is practically 100%.
PRAG’s conclusion is that SRM deployment is extremely urgent – especially for halting temperature rise in the Arctic. The PRAG diagram’s proposed trajectory for refreezing the Arctic (in blue) shows an ambition to halt Arctic temperature rise within five years. My latest estimate for the cooling power requirement is 0.5 petawatt of cooling power, give or take a factor of 2. The uncertainty in value could be reduced by analysis of data from the CERES satellite, which I hope will be done soon.
Cheers, John
[1] Wikipedia on the Azolla event
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azolla_event
[2] Wikipedia on Climate Sensitivity
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Climate_sensitivity
This is a metaphysical argument, we have changed CO2 so temperature change and sea level change cannot precede it……….
Dear John,
Agree with all you say below!
But please avoid claims in your previous email that temperature change drives CO2, which are so popular with climate change denialists!
Temperature, sea level, and CO2 are so closely intertwined by feedbacks that they strongly covary, but it will take thousands of years before we feel the full impacts of current fossil fuel CO2, although the first immediate impacts have happened even the lifetime of us old geezers.
Eelco signed off this list, so can’t back me, but I’m sure Peter Ward is familiar with climate change caused by changing CO2 sources and sinks, and not with events that suck huge amounts of heat or water out of the system with CO2 changing in response (except for Chicxulub).
Best wishes,
Tom
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John--What seems to be missed in your discussion
is that there are two different kinds of things happening now
and back during glacial cycling (and apologies in advance if I
missed something--blame haste, complications, and aging memory.)
1. At present, the change in the CO2 concentration
has been dominated by human activities taking geologically
sequestered CO2 and injecting it into the atmosphere. This has
been the primary driver of recent climate change, so the
increasing CO2 concentration is driving climate change and this
aspect of the warming will continue until roughly the fossil
fuel emissions get to very near zero--and this warming will stay
there until the CO2 concentration is brought back down. All net
zero essentially does is stop further warming.
2. But there is also a natural carbon cycle that
goes on in addition. This can be affected by climatic
conditions, including natural forcings (continental drift,
mountain building, atmospheric composition, volcanic activity,
changes in solar radiation, etc.), and human-induced forcings
(fossil fuel induced climate change, deforestation, etc.)
a. At present, human induced warming from fossil fuel emissions is causing changes in the natural carbon cycle. As one aspect, human induced warming is thawing permafrost, that releases CO2 and CH4 and these emissions increase atmospheric concentrations and cause further warming. The deforestation (human-induced) in the Amazon is also altering the natural carbon cycle, adding to warming. Warming of the Arctic leading to melting of Greenland and runoff of freshwater that tends to reduce AMOC is also altering the carbon cycle, leading to less carbon transport to the deep ocean.
b. Over the Pleistocene, the timing of the glacial cycle is well correlated with changes in various aspects of the Earth's orbit that have the effect of altering the distribution of incoming solar radiation by latitude and season. Change in the distribution of solar radiation can induce changes in climate that then alter the carbon cycle. For example, in certain configurations, Northern Hemisphere summer insolation can be higher (or lower) than average by as much as 7% or so. In that the NH is mostly land and so has a relatively small surface heat capacity, this leads to some significant changes in climate that can then affect snow and sea cover (albedo feedback) and the carbon cycle (carbon feedback)---and also water vapor feedback, sea level, time lags for ice sheets to melt and land subsidence and re-emergence to occur, etc. In the Southern Hemisphere, which is mostly ocean, and so has a large surface heat capacity, changes in the seasonal cycle of solar radiation don't matter much--it is the ongoing integral that matters. So, for natural cycling through the Pleistocene, very simply put as there are lots of complexities, changes in temperature induced by changes in the orbital parameters led to changes in the carbon cycle and climate (e.g., in ice cover) that, among other factors, amplified the magnitude of the change that would have been induced by the changes in redistribution of solar radiation alone.
So, it is not one way or the other, depending on
the situation, CO2 can lead the temperature change or the
temperature change can lead (cause) the change in the CO2
concentration. Insisting it is one or the other for all
situations makes no sense. And I'd note that different processes
can have very long time scales--the Chesapeake Bay region (where
I live) is still subsiding roughly 10,000 years after the ice
sheet to the north melted and was no longer pushing down under
it resulting in nearby areas not covered by ice getting pushed
up; That northern Canada does not have an ice sheet suggests the
Greenland ice sheet is sort of a relic of the ice age--were it
not there during the preindustrial conditions, it might well not
have formed, so there can be long hysteresis.
And that the COP process is not limiting climate change has to do with how difficult it is proving to get emissions to zero (for whatever reason--the magnitude of the problem, subsidies and skullduggery of the fossil fuel industry, the cost of changing, and on and on) and that, because it is taking so long to do, enough climate change has occurred that it is now disrupting the natural carbon cycle and that is going to increasingly make it more difficult to get warming under control and back to less than 1 C, etc.
I do agree that climate intervention is going to
be necessary to return toward 20th century conditions, that
mitigation won't do it, and that CDR, while essential, would
presently have to be built up to 40 GtCO2 or so just to stop
further warming, much less start to bring it down, so as Tom
noted, it is too slow to save the vulnerable coral.
Mike
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On Mar 9, 2024, at 5:48 PM, Jasper Sky <jasp...@gmail.com> wrote:
Men of “moral rectitude” and “impeccable integrity”?
The sheep go baaaa, baaaa, baaaa!
Men of oral rectum and invincible ignorance is more accurate.
From:
Jasper Sky <jasp...@gmail.com>
Date: Saturday, March 9, 2024 at 9:14 PM
To: H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com>
Cc: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>, Tom Goreau <gor...@globalcoral.org>, Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>, healthy-planet-action-coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>, Healthy Climate Alliance
<healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>, Peter Wadhams <peterw...@gmail.com>, JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>, Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>, Anton Keskinen <keskin...@gmail.com>, Viktor Jaakktola <vik...@operaatioarktis.fi>
Subject: Re: [HPAC] Re: [prag] Re: [HCA-list] Re: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
I think many Congressmen already know that climate science is real and not a hoax, but they won't say so publicly, because their voter base has been entrained by the right wing opinion leaders to sneer at climate science and climate issues.
Congressmen aren't opinion leaders. It's the professional propagandists like Tucker Carlson and Jordan Peterson, with millions of followers, who are the opinion leaders.
I don't agree that these guys cannot be turned. First, we won't know unless we really try. Second, they seem to have very high opinions of themselves as men of exceptional moral rectitude and integrity. Men of integrity don't lie to those who put their faith in them. We can and should invite and challenge these men to engage with real working climate scientists, until they understand the science itself (to the degree that non-physicists are capable of understanding it), and then challenge them to correct their actions of past misinformation of their devotees. They will do it simply to sustain their self-image as men of impeccable integrity.
Swinging Carlson and Peterson is 10,000x more important than swinging a Congressman. The Congressmen will swing after, and ONLY after, the public opinion of their base swings, and that will only happen after the right wing opinion leaders announce that they've seen Climate Jesus and come to the new Truth. Then their base will instantly and automatically follow.
On Sat, Mar 9, 2024, 18:02 H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
Jasper,
I agree with much of your argument except that attempting to shift hard-core Republican climate deniers whose prestige, income and influence depends upon in part on their anti-climate stance is all but hopeless.
I wouldn’t be so dismissive of Congress however.
It was a bipartisan effort two years ago that included language in congressional appropriation bills that required the administration to develop an SRM research agenda.
While as you may know the administration publicly made it very clear when they released the report last June 30 that they had absolutely no intention of actually doing any of the research they indicated was necessary.
One other point - you mentioned the Sierra club. The Sierra club published a lengthy policy paper that Bruce Melton one of the HPAC steering committee members participated in that unambiguously supports additional SRM research.
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I’d never heard of him before, but don’t plan to learn more.
Error! Filename not specified.
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On Mar 9, 2024, at 10:10 PM, Robin Collins <robin.w...@gmail.com> wrote:
HerbThat Sierra Club document unambiguously opposes SRM, and preferences NCS, however. See item 1.4.Robin
Hi Folks
I'd like to add a comment on Mike's excellent explanation.
The question of whether CO2 leads or follows the temperature
increase during past glaciations and
deglaciations is kind of moot. The periodicity evident in ice-core
records is a consequence of orbital
eccentricities that affect the solar forcing, as Mike explains.
In some cycles, cooling might have been
triggered or accelerated by a well-timed large volcanic eruption
or asteroid impact. But until the last
couple of hundred years there were only these natural triggers. It
is only since circa 1850 that modern
humans have pushed CO2 up by around 50% over pre-industrial -- and
way higher than it's been in
more than 2 million years. (I noticed that in Hansen's "More
warming in the pipeline" paper there are
a couple of graphs which suggest the last time CO2 was up at
current 420+ ppm levels was actually
more like 10 M years BP. Can anyone comment on that?) In any
event, humans have introduced a huge
perturbation -- which I guess will delay, or even cancel, the next
"regularly scheduled" glaciation.
That all said, what has been happening over the last 900,000
years or so is that as temperatures
dropped (leading to glaciations), or increased (driving
deglaciations), there were positive feedbacks
in both directions, which came from multiple sources. In the
warming phase, it was a combination
of retreating ice-sheets which reduce albedo on land and oceans;
sea level rise also contributes to
this. Dead organic material (much of it coming out of the
deep-freeze) begins to decay or burn, and
plant and animal respiration rates increase as vegetated
ecosystems expand poleward from the
equatorial region where they hunkered down during the "ice age".
To some extent photosynthesis
rates also increase with warmer temperatures, but the C3
physiological pathway is remarkably
consistent across a wide range of plant taxa. The optimal
temperature for photosynthesis is therefore
also quite consistent (I think it is around 25 C). Above that
optimum, warming increases respiration
somewhat exponentially while average photosynthesis rates decline.
Along with respiration of living
tissues, decomposition of dead organic material and combustion (of
both dead and living biomass)
all increase -- all of which results in CO2 concentration
increase--and further GHG warming. I guess
there may also be weathering processes which accelerate under
warmer conditions (more heat and
rainfall?) to increase CO2 release from carbonate rocks (but
that's not my expertise).
In the cooling phase, photosynthesis will tend to increase as
temperatures decrease towards the
optimum, and then decline, even as respiration and decomposition,
and the occurrence of natural
fires also decrease --- all of these processes result in a net
accumulation of dead organic material --
in soil carbon, litter, and peat and dead wood etc -- and hence
removal of atmospheric CO2 --
causing further cooling. At the same time, snow and ice covers
begin to accumulate and gradually
expand toward the equator, increasing albedo, driving further
cooling and decreasing the area of
vegetation -- reducing both photosynthetic CO2 uptake and, more
importantly, reducing the area
from which CO2 can be released through wildfires and
decomposition. The dead organic material
accumulates and goes into the permafrost freezer. Sea level also
drops as water accumulates in
glacier ice and further increases planetary albedo.
I hope that helps.
================
I acknowledge that I reside on
unceded Traditional
Territory of the Secwépemc
People
"Science is not about building a body of known 'facts'.
It is a method for asking awkward questions and subjecting
them [the
answers!] to a reality-check, thus avoiding the
human tendency to believe whatever makes us feel good."
Terry Pratchett.
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Hi David--Thanks for the additional elaborations.
Mike
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Dear Jasper,
I really enjoyed reading this text, thanks! Please add GeoRestoration to your toolbox, because it is so much easier to do than SRM.
Your three entry points all start with
Make sustained, relentless efforts to
or similar. However you do not say who should make these efforts. Well I guess we all should. But then, why? Because the climate crisis is looming? I am afraid that won’t work. The true things you say about politicians, being egotistical, narcisstic rats, is also true for all of us. We are not better. We need a personal benefit, some carrot before our mouth, to run. Solving the climate crisis cannot not a hobby of some well-meaning pensioneers. We need real people out there doing it. With mitigation we are already in business, we have a flourishing wind&solar industry plus thousands of other projects working on it. There is public consensus that mitigation is a good thing, so there are public funds, green initiatives… you name it. With geoengineering we have miles to go to get there.
This is where GeoRestoration (GR) comes in. It is a concept which allows removal of GHG and other restorative efforts, e.g. cleaning up plastics from the oceans, for a limited time. It focuses on past emissions, which are not affected by mitigation, therefore it does not compete with mitigation, rather adds to it, makes it complete. GR is made to make the IPCC strategy complete, not to deny it. If we would go down the line John Nissen is taking, for very honourable reasons, we would have to fight the entire climate science. That’s completely counter-productive. If you want to convince somebody of something new, at first you have to make her trust you. You do that not my attack but by confirmation. You confirm him being right, and then you say: Ok you are right (say that about 500 times) and then you say ok let’s add something, because right now we are running out of time, and we need something quick now. Make sure that this quickfix is limited in time and scope, and it does not compete with what these guys are doing, and keep repeating that they are the masters of universe and will remain unchallenged… and they will let you!
Now you will say this sounds a bit like a trick, but it is not. I am 100% convinced that and it is absolutely 100% true that
This is a message politicians can bring across without saying: Sorry guys the past 30 years we followed the wrong strategy, now we have to do SRM. No politician will do that. Because politicians, like all of us, are narcisstic rats, but rats and politicians and all of us are not stupid. Turning public opinion around is a bit like turning around a big tanker, it takes a long time and works incrementally, step by step. You have to be very careful if you move in uncharted waters.
Public opinion has already changed a lot in the past 30 years, and GR will be the next big thing. You will see it taking up speed from now on…
Regards
O
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
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Robert C, my comment on albedo potential to mitigate sea level rise was about the discussion from you, Mike MacCracken, myself and others. You are right that Peter Ward and John Englander did not say SRM can mitigate SLR. Peter expressed strong doubts about the safety of SRM. I have previously discussed this with John Englander who as I recall commented that the political barriers make SRM unrealistic.
I agree this was one of the best HPAC sessions, and encourage others to watch it (link). It provides great impetus to understand the security and humanitarian dimensions of climate responses.
Noting email discussion on how SLR relates to CO2 and temperature, I attach a graph I made from NOAA data of sea level and insolation over 300,000 years. This illustrates that orbital temperature variation was the primary systemic driver of natural climate change. CO2 level changed in response to northern summer insolation and then amplified the global climate impact through dust, albedo and other feedbacks. The millennial lag between insolation and sea level is clearly apparent. This strongly indicates that to slow sea level rise, reflecting more sunlight is our only option.
Also attaching two of Peter Ward’s slides that merit discussion.
The first slide extrapolates SLR estimates to 2300, and looks to have lower rise than John Englander suggested in his book Moving to Higher Ground, where he says “forecasts now predict sea level rising as much as eight feet this century, with even further increases considered possible.” P6
The second slide interprets a range of climate options in terms of cost, effectiveness, safety and speed, from the 2009 Royal Society report on Geoengineering (Figure 5.1. Preliminary overall evaluation of the geoengineering techniques considered in Chapters 2 and 3). My sense is that many of these judgement calls are highly contestable and are well worth debating.
Regards
Robert Tulip
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Subject: [geo] Re: [prag] RE: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
Hi RobertT
This was one of the best sessions we've had. Thanks so much for setting it up.
As regards your comments below, can you point me to where in the recording either David or Peter said that there was significant potential for albedo increase to mitigate the rate of inundation. When I asked the direct question as to what, from an Earth Science perspective, could be done to relieve SLR, my recollection is that neither offered an answer. I came away with the strong impression that they were saying that significant SLR is already baked in and there is absolutely nothing, including SRM, that can be done in the short to medium term to arrest it. This interpretation might just be a perfect example of confirmation bias on my part, so I'd really like to get this point clear.
Perhaps in response to this message, either Peter or David could clarify. The question is, from an Earth Sciences perspective and ignoring engineering, economic and political dimensions, what could now be done to stop or reverse the SLR that is already in train?
Regards
Robert
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Hi everyone,
This is a response to emails from Tom Goreau, Jasper Sky, Mike MacCracken and David Price in this thread.
Tom makes a point that saying “CO2
follows temperature” is playing into the hands of climate change deniers. I must correct myself and say that CO2
followed temperature for much of the ice ages until the early Holocene peak
warming, when mankind started emitting increasing quantities of GHGs to balance
pretty exactly the amount of cooling produced by a reducing Milankovitch signal
until the industrial revolution. If it
were not for mankind burning fuels and keeping livestock on an increasing
scale, we would now be descending into a glacial period; William Ruddiman’s hypothesis is now well
established [1].
Since the industrial revolution the warming effect of GHG emissions has been countered by SO2 cooling. There was sufficient SO2 cooling from 1940 to 1970 to reduce the global temperature and the Arctic temperature. In 1980, when CO2e was at 380 ppm and the global mean temperature was around 0.5°C, various tipping processes were activated and the Arctic started warming rapidly as snow and sea ice retreated in a vicious cycle of positive albedo feedback. Since then the Arctic has been warming at around 4 times the global average.
Jasper Sky then posed the question of “how to effectuate the urgent SRM position”. We need to overcome the resistance of the ERA lobby, which includes environmental groups who “fanatically oppose research into SAI” let alone its deployment. We also have to overcome or sideline those who continue to belittle climate change and deny the overwhelming evidence that it has become dangerous, risking the future of world prosperity.
We do need an outreach and communications strategy; and getting funding for putting this strategy into practice would be welcome. But, I think the most important thing for now is to persuade some movers and shakers in the scientific community to accept that ERA has failed and there is now an extremely urgent need for SRM deployment to halt and reverse the tipping points already activated in the Arctic before catastrophe becomes inevitable.
Then Mike MacCracken points out my mistake not to distinguish between the driving of climate change in the past and in the present. In the past few million years it was driven by Milankovitch signals, whose peak warming in the NH summer led to the Holocene maximum, around 9 kya. It certainly wasn’t driven by CO2 until the Holocene, as I explained to Tom above.
Mike then points out (marked 1) that global warming will continue even after net zero is reached. But it won’t stop global warming. I am supporting Hansen in saying that, without SRM, the temperature this century is likely to reach at least 4°C, which commits us to catastrophic sea level rise and climate change.
He also mentions many details of the carbon cycle (marked 2) and (marked 2b) the Milankovitch signals which have driven the coming and going of glacial periods prior to the Holocene.
Mike says that reason the COP processes are having difficulty in limiting climate change is because of the difficulty in getting emissions reduction. But the thrust of my argument is the ERA is doomed to fail. I’m not sure Mike agrees with me. And I’m not sure he agrees that tipping processes have already been activated, and will presage catastrophe unless they are halted and reversed SRM. It is the increasing risk of irreversible tipping into catastrophe which makes the deployment of SRM so desperately urgent.
Later in the thread, David Price adds detail to what happened in the past, in further clarification of what I was saying. His scenario of how photosynthesis has been affected by temperature sounds plausible. Mike commends it.
It seems that our immediate hurdle is to persuade some of the least dogmatic scientists who oppose SAI that the risks of deployment are minute in comparison to the risks of catastrophic climate change and sea level rise without SAI. ERA is suicidal.
Cheers, John
[1] William Ruddiman (Scientific American, 2005)
How did humans first alter global climate?
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-did-humans-first-alte/
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Once again, CO2, temperature, and sea level are so closely linked by feedbacks that to change one is to change all. As Mike says, the rising response is different that falling response, that’s why there’s hysteresis in the system, which many ignore. Each feedback mechanism introduces a different time lag in the response of the other variables to any variable. These time lags cannot be ignored, as IPCC basically does with the long term sea level response. After a thousand years the rate of sea level rise will still be accelerating, so the asymptote never appears on their longest term response curve, they go on and on “forever”.
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Hola compadres,
I was on the Sierra Club team that developed the climate policies, Climate Resilience, Carbon Dioxide Removal, March 2020.
Geoengineering, March 2020. I have related much of the history of the Club's climate policies before, but that was then and I want to do it again.
The great thing about geoengineering in these policies is that we went from, "over our dead body - anything geoengineering including research," to "supporting research in case emergency cooling is required."
This was a fairly easy lift after we decide to lower our warming target from 1.5 C to "less than 1C." The justification here -- I did this, thanks to the team for listening-- was Hansen's work on 350 ppm CO2, where this is the upper limits of equilibrium CO2 in the Holocene where our current Earth systems evolved, and anything beyond this creates tipping responses that reverse environmental services including carbon sequestration. Environmental services and ecological conservation are what Sierra Club is all about, so - easy lift. We had 350 ppm and 1.5 C both listed in our policies, which is a common incorrect association that was not understood until Hansen's "Young people's burden" paper in 2017 where he first modeled temperature and CO2 with 350 ppm CO2.
So, tipping is definitely included in the reasoning for the policies even though it is not described as "tipping." There are also several instances in the policies that discuss the point of no return of tipping, where even if the warming is removed that caused ecological collapse to begin, the collapse automatically completes.
I can't claim responsibility for adding carbon dioxide removal to the policies, thanks to Bruce Hamilton, the now retired Assistant Executive Director. Hamilton was aware of Hansen's "Young People's burden...," and the negative emissions required for 350 ppm CO2.
We met with little opposition to either CDR or geoengineering statements in numerous reviews by committees and peers and final approval by the national board, but here's the rub: nothing has been done to advance these policies and as Herb mentioned, just the opposite is true. The Summer 2022 edition of the Club magazine, Sierra, had five articles that blasted air capture CDR with every known myth in the book.
I have not been able to move this position hardly at all, because of the widespread nature of continued regurgitation of poor interpretation of findings, in both the popular press, findings and of course the consensus reporting of findings. One of the greatest reasons for this poor interpretation of the technologies, whether air capture or geoengineering, is because of lack of publishing due to trade secrets, where trillions --tens of trillions of $$$ are awaiting implementation. Proprietary secrets are phenomenally valuable with air capture at least.
Before the Inflation Reduction Act's enhancement of the IRS Section 45Q sequestration incentive, there was no reason to implement anything being scale proof of concept processes in the field. Once this was accomplish, these test processes were shut down to await incentive to use them; no negative incentive to do so: No regs limiting emissions. The positive incentives were limited because of nuances in award with the California Low Carbon Fuels Sequestration Incentives and the first two iterations of IRS 45Q (Obama started 45Q with flue capture alone, then trump doubled it and added air capture). The IRA has now added a cash payment to 45Q (with no cap btw), that has seen commitments of over 200, 1-million ton per year units; 100 by Oxy alone.
The science behind these commitments remains poorly understood by anyone bu the trade secret holders, because $$$ trillions are at stake, with the notable exception of Carbon Engineering's lime-potash process, where the process and components are widespread in industry. What is needed is what David Keith did for Carbon Carbon Engineering, which is to string the processes together to not just capture CO2 with chemicals, but to recycle the process to create a product stream. Most of the field trials we have heard of are in this category. The reasons they were shut down is not at all because they failed, but because they succeeded in their mission of demonstration and process refinement, and were then shut down to await incentive.
Market penetration is a very important concept with the near-term future of atmospheric removal. Because there is now a substantial positive incentive, industry is responding (those 200, 1-million ton per year units) and almost exclusively they use one of the three main mature processes lime-potash, amines and cryoseparation. There are many other processes and strategies, new contactors and new chemicals, and entirely novel capture strategies that are likely far superior to the three old mature processes. But these mature processes are widespread in industry, with individual components even more widespread, and with known scaling relationships.
These processes will (are being) built first, because they are the quickest route to market share, which means significant revenues fro IRS 45Q, and this is what the game is all about. We have seen this concept played out across the globe countless times. The first tech to create market share gets all the loot, at least until more efficient processes are developed that so much more efficient they can take market share away for the fist implementers. This is the way our fossil fuel economy continues to work today. Sunk costs, existing scaling, and known engineering practices are worth more $$$ faster, compared to large-scale implementation of more efficient "new" processes.
The Club has a new capture policy on CSS from flue gases, that I helped develop too, that says if we must, use the best tech available. We finished this very short policy about a year ago and it appears to be languishing - I think because of the great shortfall in funding and layoffs the Club saw in 2023.
Proposed Sierra Club Policy on Federal and State Policies Intended to Result in the Installation of Carbon Capture at Generation Facilities
Sierra Club believes that policies intended to result in the installation of carbon capture projects
at energy generation facilities, rather than policies intended to result in clean, renewable
energy, are not a climate solution. It is Sierra Club’s policy that if carbon capture technology is to
be installed at an energy generation facility, it must be maximally effective and thus remove as
much carbon dioxide from the plant’s flue stream as possible. Permitting authorities must also
appropriately address all of the other environmental concerns associated with fossil fuel
combustion, carbon capture equipment, and associated infrastructure, including potential
increases in air pollution, water use and discharges, habitat destruction, local community
impacts, and environmental justice concerns.In the above, I was able to remove a critical word "false" from the phrase "climate solution," but the concept remains. This was an entirely different team and the results --the wording above is the entire policy-- meh... Not impressed. The previous team and our 100 pages of policy on 19 different issues was a really rewarding effort. What the Club cannot grasp though, is that flue gas capture catalyzes air capture as almost all the process components are identical to air capture, and in addition, flue gas capture is better than a poke in the eye with a sharp stick. It does move the needle with emissions.
Which leads me to natural systems sequestration. Natural systems are of course the Club's bread and butter. I was able to get the concept that warming degraded natural systems cannot capture carbon into the policies, but only as an interesting aside. The Club, like almost every single policy organization of any kind, is simply behind because the literature and the consensus reporting is slow, reticent and compromised.
Moral hazard thinking is very strong in the Club, after all, these conservation advocate have dedicated their lives to advancing mostly what the popular press says about conservation issues. There are plenty of experts in the Club, but what I have seen is that the momentum of any advocate's life's work overshadows recent findings and interpretation, and that momentum of the past is strong.
First comes policy. Then acknowledgement of the policy. Then comes implementation. The momentum of history and long-term emotional attachment of advocates are tremendous things. I finally was successful in stopping the Club from continued advancing of a 1.5 C target, but it took two years after the board approved of the 2020 policies and a lot of work.
As we say in the Club...
Steep trails,
Bruce
Bruce Melton PE
Director, Climate Change Now Initiative, 501c3
President, Melton Engineering Services Austin
8103 Kirkham Drive
Austin, Texas 78736
(512)799-7998
ClimateDiscovery.org
ClimateChangePhoto.org
MeltonEngineering.com
Face...@Bruce.Melton.395
Inst...@Bruce.C.Melton
The Band Climate Change
Twitter - BruceCMelton1
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I think that Jasper’s proposal makes more sense than most of the discussion. We either pick up this torch, discuss and adapt/adopt it, or we let it die of neglect (and shame on us if we do not even push this discussion forward.)
At least the proposal needs to be in a stand-alone email message with a Subject line (could be “Jasper’s proposal” or more explicit) that is clear and relevant, and that could come from Jasper and others of the leadership.
I am just an observer who is specialized in biochar production but has climate disaster concerns. What counts is what the very well informed leaders reply. Be in agreement, or let it die, or actively kill the idea.
Paul
Doc / Dr TLUD / Paul S. Anderson, PhD
Email: psan...@ilstu.edu Skype: paultlud Mobile & WhatsApp: 309-531-4434
Website: https://woodgas.com see Resources page for 2023 “Roadmap for Climate Intervention with Biochar” and 2020 white paper, 2) RoCC kilns, and 3) TLUD stove technology.
From: healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Jasper Sky
Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2024 3:28 PM
To: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>
Cc: Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Planet Action Coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; peter....@gmail.com; gta...@bestfutures.org; Robert Hunziker <rlhun...@gmail.com>; Anton Keskinen
<keskin...@gmail.com>; Viktor Jaakktola <vik...@operaatioarktis.fi>; JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>; Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>
Subject: Re: [HPAC] RE: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
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I am trying to absorb it all and write a one page outline to start
I began by asking my family. How much are you willing to sacrifice for humans not yet born?
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Hi Sue,
very good idea, I am in.
Please make sure that the endeavour is not confined to SAI, which has the least public support of all methods discussed in this forum.
Regards
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
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Jasper, (and to all other readers)
For the HPAC discussion, I respectfully request that you stick to climate topics and definitely avoid sending messages that are strictly about America’s politics and specific candidates.
Paul
Doc / Dr TLUD / Paul S. Anderson, PhD
Email: psan...@ilstu.edu Skype: paultlud Mobile & WhatsApp: 309-531-4434
Website: https://woodgas.com see Resources page for 2023 “Roadmap for Climate Intervention with Biochar” and 2020 white paper, 2) RoCC kilns, and 3) TLUD stove technology.
From: healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Jasper Sky
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2024 12:32 AM
To: Jeff Suchon <ecom...@gmail.com>
Cc: Robin Collins <robin.w...@gmail.com>; Anton Keskinen <keskin...@gmail.com>; Healthy Climate Alliance <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>; Herb <hsim...@gmail.com>; JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>; John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>;
Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>; Peter Wadhams <peterw...@gmail.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; Tom Goreau <gor...@globalcoral.org>; Viktor Jaakktola <vik...@operaatioarktis.fi>; healthy-planet-action-coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [HPAC] Re: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
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Push elderly Biden out the door into retirement, Democrats, put Governor Whitmer forward as the candidate in November, and she'll crush the orange con man. There's no climate activism action you can take this year that could possibly be more valuable than this one thing. He's set to lose against Trump. The swing state polls are unequivocal.
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So pleased we have been able to spark this strategic discussion from Peter’s presentation on sea level.
I welcome Jasper Sky’s proposal, but have a different view. My opinion is that the political left has made itself largely irrelevant to practical climate action due to its fantasy focus on cutting emissions, and that the main appeal will need to be to the security community, to make them see that sea level rise is a primary security threat that can be mitigated with geoengineering. AMOC shutdown, extreme weather and other systemic disruptions are equally security problems that can only be dealt with by SRM.
At the moment, military security is focused on the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, and the dangers for Taiwan. Climate is barely on their radar, since maintaining energy security is seen as far more important than a drastic system change. But as Peter Ward pointed out, (slides attached), there could be hundreds of millions of climate refugees in coming decades from sea level rise.
The time to plan to prevent this calamity is now, through higher albedo to slow polar melt. That is perfectly compatible with existing political and economic arrangements.
Of course carbon is a climate threat, but there is little difference in terms of warming between a future after massive emission reduction in the 2020s and after none, compared to massive difference between possible futures with different albedo levels. That means the world can afford to delay carbon action, but cannot afford to delay albedo action. If anyone can disprove this, the arguments should be based on science, not politics. I am not interested in the political arguments of the type advanced by Oswald, as that is a capitulation to catastrophe.
So on Jasper’s four-component strategy (renewables, decarbonisation, CDR and SRM), I particularly note his observation that “SRM requires overcoming the sneers and knee-jerk opposition of the entire Republican Party and its cousins in other nations.” Unfortunately, that anti-sneer objective is not compatible with attacking fossil fuels. The gross impracticality of the Energiewende is such that right wingers will automatically reject anyone who says it is necessary. But they could give a hearing to the argument that climate security can be compatible with ongoing emissions. And they are much more capable of mobilising the moonshot resources needed to restore albedo than anyone on the left.
This is not at all an argument against decarbonisation. It simply argues that the scale of decarbonisation possible within this decade is irrelevant to climate change, and that a focus on climate needs to enable rapid albedo increase. The world has darkened by 2% in the last decade and we are slipping over the precipice.
Regards
Robert Tulip
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Hi Jasper
I like your arguments but one concern I had was: how much land
area would be needed
(mainly in the mid- to low- latitudes) to deploy 86.7 TW of
installed solar? Then you mention
the need to generate even more power to drive CDR -- though
clearly solar PV is not the only
source of non-GHG emitting power that can be used.
But it spurred me to do the math. Assuming the average PV module
is about 25% efficient
(which is probably optimistic today but achievable over the next
few years) then for full sunlight
(around 1000 Wm-2) we need approximately 4 m2 of PV panel to
generate 1 kW. Let's assume
an average 1 kW installation can generate about 1 MWh per year
(the system on my roof has
been exceeding that slightly over the last 3 years, and I am not
living in the best location by any
means). So, if I have it right: 87 TW * 4 m2 / 1kW * 1 km2 / 1e6
m2 =~ 348,000 km2.
So this is not a huge area, particularly as a lot of urban
rooftops could be covered, and I am
probably underestimating the annual production that can be
achieved. Moreover a large area of
PV deployment could be at sea. Offshore floating PV farms would
have a distinct advantage in
that their albedo won't be so different from that of exposed
seawater. Installations on land will
generally have lower albedo than the land they occupy -- which
would actually be counter to the
effect we hope to achieve with SRM.
================
I acknowledge that I reside on
unceded Traditional
Territory of the Secwépemc
People
"Science is not about building a body of known 'facts'.
It is a method for asking awkward questions and subjecting
them [the
answers!] to a reality-check, thus avoiding the
human tendency to believe whatever makes us feel good."
Terry Pratchett.
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Dear all,
can’t we agree on the following?
Regards
Oswald
Von: healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com> Im Auftrag von Alan Kerstein
Gesendet: Montag, 11. März 2024 22:20
An: Jasper Sky <jasp...@gmail.com>
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Dear Jasper--I'd like to offer a suggestion that this meeting, addressed to consider the question and the research program needed to address relevant questions, be held under the auspices of the Climate Overshoot Commission (which seems to have access to funds, and would add credibility given the affiliations of their members). They would also assure and be able to bring in the broad types of stakeholders that will be needed if a special research program is to go forward--so offering suggestions on social science research and how all the information needs to be communicated. So, the effort would be sort of independent of the COP and IPCC, not have to have every country agree to everything as the COP operates, etc.
Yes, their report was a bit reluctant to say that it was inevitable that 1.5 C would be passed, but their report was pretty open on their viewpoint, seemed to have at least some good discussion so venture into areas where it was okay (or seemed to be) for members to express different views and have both sides represented, etc.
I just think this might really keep the proposed meeting get characterized by some as by people who are beyond the pale (or it is pail?), for it is going to be really important that the effort be seen as credible.
It would also help if the meeting were based on using a decision-making framework based on risk and not on having to have two sigma confidence before making a finding. For IPCC, the underlying hypothesis has been that things are natural and will move slowly unless proven otherwise to two-sigma significance. For this meeting, based on risk, the underlying hypothesis should be reversed--that is, the world is on a path to catastrophe that will be untenable for future generations and we will want to figure out what has to be done so that Greta Thunberg and future generations can have high confidence that the future world would be viable for them (right now IPCC sort of gives a 50% or 66% chance it will be livable and Greta rightly, on behalf of the youth, says that this is simply unacceptably inadequate, especially given that IPCC has pretty consistently been under estimating what has been coming to pass. So, basically, use a decision framework consistent with what society has been using (and proper due diligence apparently dictates) that the outcome must be resilient to the worst plausible outcome--so building bridges, etc. to withstand 1 in 100 year events, make sure vaccines are viable to some high degree, and more.
And so, Suzanne, I hope the discussion that you and Dennis will be leading, lays out some thinking on how to ensure whatever emerges as the proposed work program will have credibility not only in our eyes but in the eyes of the community out there (one can't just declare one has credibility by who participates--one has to earn credibility by the rigor of the explanation and forthrightly dealing with questions from whom one is trying to gain credibility)), and then also puts forth a view on the decision framework that we would be trying to speak in. I've felt for quite some time that IPCC and COP do not adequately explain the decision framework they are using (yes, IPCC has definitions of its lexicon) and how the framework compares to the decision frameworks by other components of society and the significance of the choice.
Best, Mike MacCracken
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Hi Jeff,
GeoRestoration includes MCB…
Oswald
Sorry--I meant the Climate Overshoot Commission.
Their phrase was CARE, Cut emission, Adapt to impact, Remove Carbon, Explore SRM. What the proposed meeting could help do is indicate how much of each is possible and what in addition to Exploring SRM is needed.
Mike
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Jasper,
You missed my point. Americans are bombarded with opinion messages from now to early November. Regardless of which party I prefer, your comments are not needed nor wanted by me (and probably MANY others) on this forum.
Please stop such messages to this discussion group.
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Hi Jasper, I am pleased you are so optimistic about renewable energy scale up.
My doubts about this optimism come partly from observing the concerted campaign against SRM, since it is obvious that SRM is needed now to counteract the dangerous loss of sulphur aerosols. The vitriol and emotion within this campaign leads me to suspect its leaders are not open to rational dialogue about climate risk, and therefore have distorted their claims. As I said, I am not opposed to decarbonisation, I simply want to understand the scientific basis for the advocacy.
Shifting the climate debate to focus on cooling requires legitimate scientific questioning of claims about renewable energy potential. Conflicts of interest and ideological agendas from renewable proponents can distort priorities, contributing to unrealistic cost and time estimates.
I would like to see rebuttals of the arguments presented by Simon Michaux, who contends that there is excessive optimism about materials, personnel and costs for the proposed renewable rollouts, and by Vaclav Smil, who argues that the scale of ongoing fossil fuel need is much bigger than assumed in renewable energy literature. How concerns about renewable intermittency affect the ability to prevent blackouts through provision of backup baseload energy also needs to be clarified.
To reverse warming it does not matter greatly how fast we move away from fossil fuels, if the cooling can be delivered by SRM. Warming is caused by the 2.5 trillion tonnes of CO2 that has been emitted, less the small proportion that has already been stabilised by natural processes. Annual emissions worsen committed warming by about 2%, so decarbonising at 10% per year would mitigate about 0.2% of warming each year, a marginal figure.
Here in Australia there is significant concern about damage to agriculture and environment from renewable plans. A widespread perception is that these concerns are just brushed aside for ideological motives by people who hypocritically claim they want to protect the environment by slowing global warming. The cost and impact of new transmission lines to install renewables at scale in our low density geography is high.
I looked at the Breyer et al precis you linked, and felt that its argument that renewables transition can help keep warming below 1.5 is exaggerated. The total absence of discussion of albedo makes the strategic vision of this paper inadequate.
Thanks & Regards
Robert Tulip
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Dear Jasper,
SRM is a very ambiguous term, could you please be more precise?
We are strictly against SAI, but do support low-key albedo enhancement such as MCB …
Regards
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
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Oswald, it isn't for me, or for the proposed CMIP project, to presuppose which SRM method will gain favor. My project proposal will suggest, inter alia, that different SRM methods shall be modeled to help shed light on which appears to have the best combination of characteristics in terms of avoiding climatic and ecological disruptions, and effectiveness at achieving desired cooling outcomes. But it's unlikely to be the last word on the "which SRM" topic.As you know, there are heated differences of opinion amongst SRM proponents on this question. It is not a settled issue, even amongst bona fide SRM experts. It would be an intellectual and strategic mistake for a research project on the question of whether SRM is necessary to choose a side in the "which SRM" debate at this point, before the CMIP models explore the matter. Hopefully the outcome of the research will move the "which flavor of SRM" discussion a step further into focus as an ancillary benefit of the project.
On Tue, Mar 12, 2024, 08:11 Oswald Petersen <oswald....@hispeed.ch> wrote:
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Hi Oswald
Each of your proposed terms in your email below has problems.
“Mitigation” defined as emission reduction and sink enhancement is an Orwellian misuse of language, a legacy of obsolete thinking from the UNFCCC. Emission reduction cannot mitigate climate change except as a small component of a broader program led by sunlight reflection to cool the temperature. It is wrong, harmful and misleading to endorse any language that implies sunlight reflection cannot mitigate global warming. Since that false belief is what anti-cooling NGOs try to promote with their bizarre propaganda against “mitigation deterrence”, their false premise on the meaning of mitigation has to be rejected. Rectifying this definition recognises that albedo restoration through rebrightening of the Earth needs to become central to mitigation of global warming.
“Negative Emissions” is equally confusing, as a linguistic paradox that is best not used. An equivalent is Greenhouse Gas Removal, as a broader term encompassing both carbon dioxide removal and methane removal, but still not covering the photosynthetic conversion of CO2 into useful products. My favoured term is Carbon Conversion as proposed at https://www.energy.gov/fecm/carbon-conversion. Although Carbon Conversion is not in wide use, it has the advantage of promoting the idea that CO2 can be mined from the air and sea to make bulk commercial commodities such as soil and construction materials as part of a future circular economy. Even though that is only gradually becoming feasible at scale, my view is that carbon conversion will have to eventually largely replace CDR concepts such as geosequestration that offer no potential profit. Carbon needs to be understood as a highly valuable element to protect and enhance the productive and sustainable flourishing of abundant biodiversity and human industry, not something that needs to be removed.
“GeoRestoration” is a proprietary term from http://georestoration.com/, a company working on soil remediation. Unfortunately that means it cannot be broadly accepted within the climate space.
This all illustrates the challenges of finding common language to support our agreed goals, as well as to talk through differences of strategic emphasis.
Regards
Robert Tulip
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Dear Jasper (and Oswald)--I would like to offer a
different view.
The El Nino versus La Nina show very clearly that different patterns in surface temperature lead to changes in the atmospheric circulation. The warmer Arctic makes the same point. What persistent MCB will do is alter the surface temperature pattern--if it is doing this is it working at all? So, MCB can lead to changes in the atmospheric circulation--that is how the teleconnection of MCB works having some remote effect as Stephen Salter has talked about. So, let's not say MCB won't have some regional influences on the circulation, which is to say it will affect the weather, and not just how much solar is absorbed in the area of the ocean where it is done (and ocean circulation might change as well. Given the CO2 forcing is relatively uniform around the world, one would really like to be counterbalancing that and that would require a relatively uniform negative focing over the Earth--and MCB is not globally uniform.
On the other hand stratospheric aerosol injection does lead to relatively uniform influence around latitudes since that is how the winds spread aerosols--and can be made to be relatively uniform by latitude as well, depending on how injected (or non-uniform if that is what would provide most benefit). Ruling it out makes no sense at all. There has actually been a good bit of experience with stratospheric aerosol injections due to volcanic eruptions and knowledge gained. And this does indicate that there can be seasonal patterns in the response in terms of circulation and temperature pattern (possibly due to the different ocean-land characteristics even though forcing might be longitudinally and even latitudinally uniform).
Note that changes in vegetation can also lead to changes in circulation and precipitation--indeed, just look at how changes in the Amazon are affecting conditions, and deforestation does too. In fact, the first climate change assessment in the US was done by Thomas Jefferson who evaluated how the deforestation of North America's coastal Atlantic Plain affected the sea breeze regime, etc. I don't mean to say don't do it, just don't claim that it has no effect--the whole hope is to have less change than currently being induced.
All this said, I simply don't understand the argument that it is less palatable--it is rather key that the effects induced do have large scale/global influence, and that is just not the case with doing MCB in any one location and doing MCB in different places can't just simply be added together as if everything can just be added together, etc.
We need studies of the various approaches working together in a various reinforcing ways, etc. I'd suggest (as I did some days/weeks ago) that stratospheric aerosol intervention can tend to get the world on average back to earlier conditions and MCB and other approaches can help to moderate apparent negative adverse consequences. I don't see how the reverse can work.
Mike MacCracken
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Dear Oswald--I would add one further response to
your comment.
Virtually all model simulations of stratospheric
aerosol injection show that SAI can be designed to take the
climate a good bit back toward the unperturbed climate. Not
perfect, but then the pre-CO2 climate was not one set of
condition--the climate has a range due to both internal and
external variability to which the world has pretty much gotten
used to (not perfect, of course--nothing is perfect).
Mike
Hi Jasper--A few suggestions:
1. It would be good to compare your emissions cutback scenario to the various scenarios the modeling groups have run and to figure out if any of the existing runs that have been made are close enough to use.
2. The MAGICC models is a fast running energy balance model that has been set up to emulate the global average results of the GCMs. You should plan to run your scenario in that model and compare to the existing scenarios and how plausible it looks when put together. The model is freely downloadable. It is not easy to run on Apple computers. You should approach Shannon Flume to perhaps run your case--even cases--as she has done for Peter Fiekowsky.
3. With those simulations, you can gain a lot of insights.
4. You may have noticed that Kelly Wanser's recent report on Silverlining indicated that they have hired a climate modeler from NCAR--so he knows how to run such models and could perhaps do so as there seem to be ways to find computer time.
5. If you really get an interesting scenario together, you might be able to get the GeoMIP project to consider running the case. They have their annual meeting coming up in July at Cornell (and it might even be you could get the Cornell group to run the scenario). There is not really a need to run in lots of models--it is reasonably well understood how models are performing compared to others, so getting runs on a few representative models would likely be adequate for the purposes you are talking about.
The key is to put together a sensible scenario. You can learn a lot about doing that by looking at how the model scenarios have been put together, what forcings they include, what they do not, what is considered interactively and what is fixed and how fixing some aspects can help to simplify the scenario and allow fewer and simpler simulations to get insights to the relative strengths and weaknesses of the scenario you are proposing. So, really do your homework on this. Shannon Flume with MAGICC could help you make sure the scenario is put together well.
Best, Mike MacCracken
The primary objectives of Scenario-MIP are to:
On 12 Mar 2024, at 18:23, Jasper Sky <jasp...@gmail.com> wrote:
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Dear Michael,
would you mind commenting on the suggestion we make?
SAI is the most known GeoEngineering (GE) method. Virtually all media comments work the same pattern.
So, in a way, SAI (inadvertently) blocks all other GE methods!
We want to do GHG removal the big way. We want to remove legacy GHG, not to be confused with “negative emissions”. We can cool the planet faster, safer and more efficient than SAI or any other SRM method can. This is the way to go, forget SRM.
Global Warming is caused by GHG, not by solar radiation. Curing it means taking out the GHG, not enhancing albedo. Work the cause, not the symptoms.
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Hi Robert,
«mitigation» and «negative emissions» are the terms used by IPCC for their respective and well-known purposes. I use these “official” terms, because our goal is to cool the planet, not to be right about some terminology,
Regards
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
Hi Jasper
My first contribution to this thread as I'm more of an observer than a participant at this level of detail.
I am unclear whether Equilibrium Climate Sensitivity (ECS) is an output or input to these models, however, it seems to me that because ECS is a critical parameter in determining climate futures, it would be helpful to treat it as a variable in this investigation. If it is as input, this could be done by, for example, using the IPCC range of values for ECS centred around 3C for 2XCO2, or the range proposed by Hansen et al in Warming in the Pipeline, centred around 4.8C. If ECS is an output, it could be done by varying the input values of those parameters that most directly effect the emergent value of ECS to examine the same range of alternative values. The purpose is to assess the extent to which modelled futures are sensitive to the conclusions reached by Hansen et al.
Hope that makes sense.
Robert
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Hi Jasper
I should also have added a suggestion that
the impact of Hansen et al's radicallly different value for
climate response time (~100 yrs vs. ~20 yrs) would also be worth
examining.
Robert
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Dear Robin,
I would not want SAI. But that does not mean that I expect SAI to be out. That’s no “contradictio in adjecto”. Let me explain:
I am completely aware that this process is one that requires discussions and compromises till the final document has been agreed upon. In that discussion my position is “No SAI”. But I will lose that point, if I am in a minority position, which is probably the case. That’s completely ok, I do not (have to) win every time. Then again that does not bend my position, it still is “No SAI”.
What is more important is that our GRAP (enclosed) is also included. We think it is the better alternative and we want the scientific world to discuss it.
Regards
Oswald Petersen
Atmospheric Methane Removal AG
Lärchenstr. 5
CH-8280 Kreuzlingen
Tel: +41-71-6887514
Mob: +49-177-2734245
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 13. März 2024 14:05
An: Oswald Petersen <oswald....@hispeed.ch>
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This thread illustrates many of the tensions existing even amongst those that are aware of the urgent need for action to cool the planet.
The tensions arise from different people having different views about what constitute ‘facts’ or ‘evidence’ about a) the current state of the global climate system, b) human interventions and other changes in our collective behaviour that have either intended or unintended climate impacts in the future, and c) the new climate future they will bring about over different timescales. Wrapped up in this, but rarely explicitly discussed, are also a whole range of sociopolitical issues that are driven by our different values and what we each consider would be the kind of world our successors should inherit.
The problem is that we have varying degrees of agreed facts and evidence about the current state of the climate system and increasingly fewer comprehensive or agreed facts about what kind of climate future our actions will generate. This is to be expected because the future is path dependent and inescapably unknowable. The general assumption is that the future will unfold incrementally as it has done during most of history, and certainly for most people alive today, during their lives and those of their parents and grandparents. Even the horrors of conflict throughout the last century were rapidly transformed into mere blips in the human story, and largely irrelevant to the climate story. That isn’t to belittle in any way the tragedies suffered by so many, and still suffered by too many. It is simply to acknowledge that these have not radically disrupted the trajectory of human history that has continued its population, well-being and economic growth trends of the last several centuries with just short-lived interruptions for these conflicts. But we ignore, at our peril, the established fact that throughout Earth’s history, occasionally the future has unfolded paroxysmally and the possibility that right now we might be on threshold of another such singularity.
It would seem prudent not to take ideological or dogmatic positions on any of the issues affecting our climate and social future. Accumulating evidence suggests that our current circumstances are at best uncertain and at worst precarious. Nothing should be ruled in or out until there is hard evidence to determine that choice. On the other hand, we don’t have the time or resources to chase all the rabbits down their holes, so we have to be canny in deciding which to experiment with and the criteria for their enhancement and replication or their abandonment.
I wonder whether there is a case for those promoting technologies and other interventions as contributions to humanity’s efforts to respond to the dangers caused by almost 300 years of uncontrolled GHG emissions, to set out explicit criteria by which their ideas are to be tested for acceptance or rejection – what has to happen, where and at what scale, by when with what effects, for it to justify the next tranche of investment of time and resources, and be canned if it doesn’t meet these criteria.
It has been commented that we should focus on the causes not the symptoms, implying that efforts to reduce GHG emissions and atmospheric GHG concentrations are more important than cooling the planet by SRM. This is to totally misunderstand the nature of complex adaptive systems. The symptoms themselves quickly become causes of further changes that can destabilise the system; these are often referred to as 'feedbacks'. The distinction between cause and effect is a hangover from the reductionist thinking applied to linear deterministic systems. It is a folly of monumental proportions to apply it to the climate system and the flourishing of the Earthly biosphere. We need to keep the patient alive by preventing the symptoms from killing him while simultaneously dealing with the underlying causes. This is absolutely both/and, not either/or.
Please stop arguing about whether reducing carbon or increasing cooling is the more important or urgent. If we consider that we are rapidly approaching some kind of existential tipping point, then both are necessary, both are urgent. They do different things but both those things are vital. We need to reduce atmospheric GHGs to stop making the problem worse. We need to cool the planet to buy us the time for reducing the GHGs to have its cooling effect, and to provide the time for sociopolitical institutions and human aspirations to adapt to a more sustainable future. We need to unify around this message.
Of course, if you’re confident that we’re not facing some kind of existential threat, then by all means, ignore this message.
Robert
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Dear Robert and Jasper--For the full global models, the climate sensitivity emerges from treatment of all the physics they include. Now, it is true that the models do not include some of the long timescale physics, particularly some aspects that are involved in the higher climate sensitivities that Jim Hansen's analyses get to.
In the energy balance model MAGICC (https://magicc.org), the model goes from emissions to concentrations to radiative forcing and then uses a user-specified climate sensitivity to calculate the evolution of the global average temperature over time (so has time lags due to ocean in it, etc.). By allowing user specification of the climate sensitivity, one can explore the range that the IPCC models and various scientist like Jim Hansen suggest.
As noted in an earlier note, the first thing to be doing to have the basis to even talk to the climate modelers about possible runs is to do a good bit of analysis using the MAGICC model.
Mike MacCracken
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Dear Jeff and the MEER group--In that 95% or so the heat trapped by GHGs is taken up by the ocean, it would seem that what needs to be done is to reduce that heat uptake; only something like 5% of the trapped heat is going into melting the ice sheets and permafrost.
There is no question that using mirrors over land areas during the day can limit peak temperatures. What I want to know (proven in modeling) is if that really reduces the amount of energy trapped by the Earth system? While it may seem obvious, I'm not yet convinced as I think the full diurnal cycle needs to be considered. What normally happens is that there is sunlight absorption on the land during the day and then loss via convection during the late afternoon if the region is humid and loss via radiation at night, especially in arid environments. So during the night, regions often cool down to near the dew point, which is really telling us that the atmosphere has radiated away virtually all the heat it can--if there is less heat around, the radiation down to the dew point would occur earlier overnight than later, but basically all the day's heat has been lost. In urban areas where buildings take up heat, it can take a bit more time as the buildings have greater heat capacity than the soils, and so would be nice to have urban areas be higher reflectivity so that does not happen--so cooling urban areas would be helped by not absorbing as much solar so make everything there as while as one can, and fine to have mirrors elsewhere to keep peak temperatures down, but that would seem mainly to mean a bit less IR radiation at night, so, as far as the planet is concerned, does this offset the amount of solar reflected by mirrors during the day?
As just an example of night time cooling, before
cars had air conditioning (so in 1961, I think it was), our
family drove around the country on a family trip and we hung a
canvas bag with water in it from our antenna. This gave us nice
cool water to drink during as we traveled in warm areas (we also
had a window swamp cooler--air went in as we drove and went over
water so evaporation took some of the heat and coolish air came
into the car). Well, when we parked for the night with our tent
camper in rural Nevada (I guess this is all of Nevada except Las
Vegas), the days were in the 90s, but at night our canvas water
cooler had icicles dripping from it. There was basically no heat
left from the previous day--so would mirrors there during the
day have made any difference?
Yes, less peak solar would lead to less local evaporation in areas where there is soil moisture, but the atmospheric humidity is mainly controlled by the atmospheric circulation and evaporation out over the oceans. That rivers take water back to the ocean is clear evidence that the atmosphere is bringing water evaporated over the ocean to over the land. Yes, re-evaporation occurs, but to a large extent, absolute humidity is mainly influenced by evaporation over the ocean and that is where the trapped heat is accumulating.
So, I think there is a real question about whether
a lot of mirrors over the land will have a global cooling
influence by anything like the increased amount of reflected
energy of mirrors over land, there quite possibly being a
significant compensation by the reduction of nighttime IR. I'd
like to be proven wrong--but just calculating the change in
solar radiation absorbed is not going to convince me. A much
more thorough study is needed.
Mike
PS--Oh, and I will agree that by keeping peak daytime temperature down it would seem likely that this will reduce the demand for air-conditioning and so demand for energy, and if that energy is coming from fossil fuels, will reduce CO2 emissions, so I really don't want to imply that mirrors are not locally beneficial. And since the daily average temperature metric is the average of maximum and minimum temperature, this will lower the daily temperature anomaly and so were mirrors done over all land areas the seeming average temperature anomaly would drop (though land covers only 30% of the Earth). But, I'm just not convinced that their reflectivity itself will reduce oceanic heat uptake, which, as Jim Hansen notes is the key issue (basically, EEI and oceanic heat uptake are the same thing).
PPS--And this latter argument may also well apply
to saying that forests will make us cooler--is this really
having a big effect on EEI, or just on the local temperatures?
I think that Jasper’s proposal makes more sense than most of the discussion. We either pick up this torch, discuss and adapt/adopt it, or we let it die of neglect (and shame on us if we do not even push this discussion forward.)
At least the proposal needs to be in a stand-alone email message with a Subject line (could be “Jasper’s proposal” or more explicit) that is clear and relevant, and that could come from Jasper and others of the leadership.
I am just an observer who is specialized in biochar production but has climate disaster concerns. What counts is what the very well informed leaders reply. Be in agreement, or let it die, or actively kill the idea.
Paul
Doc / Dr TLUD / Paul S. Anderson, PhD
Email: psan...@ilstu.edu Skype: paultlud Mobile & WhatsApp: 309-531-4434
Website: https://woodgas.com see Resources page for 2023 “Roadmap for Climate Intervention with Biochar” and 2020 white paper, 2) RoCC kilns, and 3) TLUD stove technology.
From: healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Jasper Sky
Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2024 3:28 PM
To: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>
Cc: Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Planet Action Coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; peter....@gmail.com; gta...@bestfutures.org; Robert Hunziker <rlhun...@gmail.com>; Anton Keskinen <keskin...@gmail.com>; Viktor Jaakktola <vik...@operaatioarktis.fi>; JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>; Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>
Subject: Re: [HPAC] RE: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
You don't often get email from jasp...@gmail.com. Learn why this is important
This message originated from outside of the Illinois State University email system. Learn why this is important
I have a concrete and specific action proposal to put forward, gentlemen, regarding how to get traction on SRM as part of a four-part climate management agenda (ramp up green energy, ramp down fossil energy, implement >50 GtCO2 net negative emissions per year, apply interim SRM to cool things down, all in service of a century-long trajectory back down to a target pre-industrial ppm CO2 level of 275 ppm).
What I propose follows up on the key point this thread is grappling with: How do we move the needle on getting SRM taken up seriously in the global policy discourse?
As John Nissen suggests, the priority is to assemble a quorum of climate scientists with impeccable credibility to answer a crucial question:
Can Emissions Reduction Alone (ERA) suffice to stop the Earth from crossing key climate tipping element thresholds? Or will it be necessary to add SRM to prevent the crossing of tipping points?
To put the question in more detail: What long-term ppm CO2 target should humanity steer toward?, and by what target year?, what aggressive yet plausible trajectory of present-to-peak ppm CO2 and CO2 peak-to-target ppm can we envision achieving? (i.e. how fast can we hope to get emissions down to net zero, and what rate of net negative annual GtCO2 emissions can we achieve after the peak year as we move back down toward our target ppm level?), and given a maximally aggressive "back to the Holocene" ppm CO2 trajectory, what climate tipping elements will tip along the way between now and a return to our lower long-term ppm CO2 target level *in the absence of SRM*?
In particular, what will the resultant cumulative sea level rise be *in the absence of SRM*? Can we set a target maximum cumulative sea level rise that we do not want to go beyond, e.g. one meter, and calibrate our climate interventions to stay within that target on a risk-assessed probability basis of, say, >80% confidence that we'll not exceed the target? Can we meet that target (with >80% confidence) on the basis of Emissions Reductions Alone (ERA)? Or do we need to supplement emissions reductions with temporary SRM to cool things down during our transition back down to our target ppm?
By the way, I think the target has to be 275 ppm CO2 by about 2130 CE, not Jim Hansen's target of 350 ppm, which I've never really understood as a long-term target. I agree with an interim target of 350 ppm by 2100, as many have mooted. I discussed Jim Hansen's proposed 350 ppm target with Jim during a taxi ride between Berlin airport and the Potsdam PIK institute in summer 2008. Frankly, I think he kind of pulled 350 ppm out of a hat. Atmospheric ppm CO2 concentrations drive sea level over the medium term. It is clearer now than it was in 2008 that the Greenland and West Antarctic Ice Sheets (GrIS and WAIS) cross their tipping thresholds whenever ppm CO2 approaches 300 ppm, never mind 350 or 420 ppm. During the interglacial period MIC 11c, which lasted around 30k years and peaked around 417,000 years ago, Greenland and West Antarctica were ice-free, and sea level was much higher than today, but ppm CO2 during that interglacial varied between 265 and 280 ppm. This strongly suggests that 350 ppm (sustained over a sufficient number of decades) would push GrIS and WAIS well past their tipping-points into irreversible meltdown dynamics. The same might be true of the Wilkes Basin section of East Antarctica. The overall impact would be about 15 meters SLR from these three ice sheets (7.2m from GriS alone, another 3.5 to 4.5m from WAIS alone), and we can add thermal expansion of seawater and ice mass loss from the Himalayas, Andes, Alps, etc. to that cumulative SLR figure.
What we need to do is organize a scientific project that directly addresses the questions above, complete with funding for climate models, research papers, a dedicated major scientific conference, and participation of top quality science communicators, youtubers, journalists, economists, etc., to report on the results. In brief, the question to address is whether Emissions Reductions Alone, ERA, even at a very aggressive pace, can suffice to prevent the loss of GrIS, WAIS, and Wilkes Basin Ice Sheets, and several other tipping elements, e.g. loss of nearly all tropical coral reefs, dangerous slowdown of AMOC, dangerous levels of methane and CO2 outgassing from the circumpolar permafrost, destabilization of shallow-water methane hydrates in the Arctic Sea, conversion of Amazonia from rainforest to savannah and its wider consequences, and a few other key tipping elements. And if climate modeling shows that ERA, even at an aggressive pace, cannot achieve the prevention of crossing these tipping element thresholds, at an acceptable risk level, then could a combination of aggressive ERA and SRM achieve a safe climate trajectory between now and when we get "back to the Holocene"? which in my view, again, ought to explicitly be a target return to 275 ppm CO2 well before the middle of the 22nd century, e.g. by 2030.
I propose that a key scenario for the climate model research we will seek to engender should be a return to 350 ppm by 2100 and to 275 ppm by 2130. To achieve this, we'll need aggressive emissions reductions, net negative emissions on the order of 50 to 60 GtCO2 per annum between mid-21st century and 2130 to get to 275 ppm by 2030, and SRM to provide interim cooling to achieve a safe trajectory. It is not clear whether or not it's already too late to stop the loss of WAIS and GrIS (whether they've crossed their tipping thresholds); lots of cryosphere scientists think they have. It's entirely unclear whether aggressive circumpolar albedo enhancement could stop or reverse their ice mass loss trend.
We crossed 350 ppm in 1987. To return to pre-industrial CO2 levels by about 2030, we have to reverse the sign on our pace of emissions from 50 to 60 GtCO2eq per annum to minus 50 to 60 GtCO2eq per annum, ASAP. That means building several hundred clean energy Gigafactories, producing equipment for solar PV + wind turbine + energy storage + balance-of-system + other cleantech. If we build about 400 Gigafactories of 20 GW annual production capacity, we'll install a cumulative 130 TW of combined wind and solar capacity after 17 years of production (85% solar PV capacity, 15% wind power capacity), which in my back of the envelope calculations would allow us to devote 100 TW combined solar and wind power capacity for running a prosperous fully electrified post-fossil-fuels global civilization of about 175,000 TWh, or about 18.5 MWh per person per annum, by 2050... and apply a further 30 TW of combined solar and wind power capacity, or about 52,500 TWh per annum, to a combination of CDR and interim SRM methods for the purpose of reducing ppm CO2 by 2.75 ppm per annum on a trajectory back down to 275 ppm by 2030, whilst keeping things cool enough to stop the various tipping elements from crossing their thresholds in the meantime, insofar as that remains possible (it may already be too late for the coral reefs, for the Amazon rainforest, and for WAIS and GrIS - it's unclear).
From: geoengi...@googlegroups.com <geoengi...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of robert...@gmail.com
Cc: 'Healthy Planet Action Coalition' <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; 'Planetary Restoration' <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; 'geoengineering' <geoengi...@googlegroups.com>; 'Healthy Climate Alliance' <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>; 'JOHN ENGLANDER' <johneng...@gmail.com>
Subject: [geo] Re: [prag] RE: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
Hi RobertT
This was one of the best sessions we've had. Thanks so much for setting it up.
As regards your comments below, can you point me to where in the recording either David or Peter said that there was significant potential for albedo increase to mitigate the rate of inundation. When I asked the direct question as to what, from an Earth Science perspective, could be done to relieve SLR, my recollection is that neither offered an answer. I came away with the strong impression that they were saying that significant SLR is already baked in and there is absolutely nothing, including SRM, that can be done in the short to medium term to arrest it. This interpretation might just be a perfect example of confirmation bias on my part, so I'd really like to get this point clear.
Perhaps in response to this message, either Peter or David could clarify. The question is, from an Earth Sciences perspective and ignoring engineering, economic and political dimensions, what could now be done to stop or reverse the SLR that is already in train?
Regards
Robert
On 08/03/2024 09:30, rob...@rtulip.net wrote:
Dear Peter
Thank you very much for your superb presentation and discussion.
Our community of interest in HPAC supports the triad of direct climate cooling, GHG removal and emission reduction.
One of the themes that arose in the discussion on your information on the likelihood of severe impacts from sea level rise is that nothing we can do about carbon can affect the risk of several metres of SLR this century, destroying all low lying coastal infrastructure and agriculture, but there is significant potential for albedo increase to mitigate the rate of inundation. Increasing planetary reflectivity would require concerted attention to the safety and feasibility of various methods proposed, which unfortunately are the object of strong disinformation campaigns.
This point about albedo potential has not been adequately appreciated in policy discussions, especially regarding the security and misery impacts.
Your slide 42 linked in my email below provides estimates of effectiveness, timeliness, safety and affordability for main climate interventions. I don’t think it is at all accurate as regards efforts to deal with sea level rise, given the primary role of albedo in mitigation potential.
Your suggestion to engage on advocacy is very welcome, for example finding media willing to cover this important topic, sharing well-crafted messages. One theme we are discussing is the need to rebrighten the world, as discussed at rebrighten.org.
Best Regards
Robert Tulip
https://www.healthyplanetaction.org/
Healthy Planet Action Coalition
From: Peter D Ward <ar...@uw.edu>
Sent: Friday, March 8, 2024 10:53 AM
To: rob...@rtulip.net
Cc: Healthy Planet Action Coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; geoengineering <geoengi...@googlegroups.com>; Healthy Climate Alliance <healthy-clim...@googlegroups.com>; JOHN ENGLANDER <johneng...@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: Recording of Dr Peter D. Ward: Sea level change: How bad, how fast? HPAC Thu March 7
Thank you all for your attention and you patience in my many areas of ignorance especially about engineering. I learned a great deal and want to help going forward.
I will write an Op Ed. I hope it is of quality that you will sign on. We need to do more. I need to do more
On Thu, Mar 7, 2024 at 3:51 PM <rob...@rtulip.net> wrote:
The recording of the HPAC conversation today with Dr Peter D. Ward on Sea Level Change is at https://youtu.be/YjwacAjHsHU
This discussion covers vital information for Earth’s future.
Dr Ward’s slides are temporarily here.
Participant comments included input from sea level expert Dr John Englander as well as dialogue on the potential of solar geoengineering to mitigate sea level rise.
Dr Peter Ward is Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Washington. He is co-author of the influential book Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe, and is a leading expert on the causes of mass extinctions (see his TED talk, my review of Under a Green Sky).
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On Mar 13, 2024, at 8:36 AM, Michael MacCracken <mmac...@comcast.net> wrote:Dear Jeff and the MEER group--In that 95% or so the heat trapped by GHGs is taken up by the ocean, it would seem that what needs to be done is to reduce that heat uptake; only something like 5% of the trapped heat is going into melting the ice sheets and permafrost.
There is no question that using mirrors over land areas during the day can limit peak temperatures. What I want to know (proven in modeling) is if that really reduces the amount of energy trapped by the Earth system? While it may seem obvious, I'm not yet convinced as I think the full diurnal cycle needs to be considered. What normally happens is that there is sunlight absorption on the land during the day and then loss via convection during the late afternoon if the region is humid and loss via radiation at night, especially in arid environments. So during the night, regions often cool down to near the dew point, which is really telling us that the atmosphere has radiated away virtually all the heat it can--if there is less heat around, the radiation down to the dew point would occur earlier overnight than later, but basically all the day's heat has been lost. In urban areas where buildings take up heat, it can take a bit more time as the buildings have greater heat capacity than the soils, and so would be nice to have urban areas be higher reflectivity so that does not happen--so cooling urban areas would be helped by not absorbing as much solar so make everything there as while as one can, and fine to have mirrors elsewhere to keep peak temperatures down, but that would seem mainly to mean a bit less IR radiation at night, so, as far as the planet is concerned, does this offset the amount of solar reflected by mirrors during the day?
As just an example of night time cooling, before cars had air conditioning (so in 1961, I think it was), our family drove around the country on a family trip and we hung a canvas bag with water in it from our antenna. This gave us nice cool water to drink during as we traveled in warm areas (we also had a window swamp cooler--air went in as we drove and went over water so evaporation took some of the heat and coolish air came into the car). Well, when we parked for the night with our tent camper in rural Nevada (I guess this is all of Nevada except Las Vegas), the days were in the 90s, but at night our canvas water cooler had icicles dripping from it. There was basically no heat left from the previous day--so would mirrors there during the day have made any difference?
Yes, less peak solar would lead to less local evaporation in areas where there is soil moisture, but the atmospheric humidity is mainly controlled by the atmospheric circulation and evaporation out over the oceans. That rivers take water back to the ocean is clear evidence that the atmosphere is bringing water evaporated over the ocean to over the land. Yes, re-evaporation occurs, but to a large extent, absolute humidity is mainly influenced by evaporation over the ocean and that is where the trapped heat is accumulating.
So, I think there is a real question about whether a lot of mirrors over the land will have a global cooling influence by anything like the increased amount of reflected energy of mirrors over land, there quite possibly being a significant compensation by the reduction of nighttime IR. I'd like to be proven wrong--but just calculating the change in solar radiation absorbed is not going to convince me. A much more thorough study is needed.
Mike
PS--Oh, and I will agree that by keeping peak daytime temperature down it would seem likely that this will reduce the demand for air-conditioning and so demand for energy, and if that energy is coming from fossil fuels, will reduce CO2 emissions, so I really don't want to imply that mirrors are not locally beneficial. And since the daily average temperature metric is the average of maximum and minimum temperature, this will lower the daily temperature anomaly and so were mirrors done over all land areas the seeming average temperature anomaly would drop (though land covers only 30% of the Earth). But, I'm just not convinced that their reflectivity itself will reduce oceanic heat uptake, which, as Jim Hansen notes is the key issue (basically, EEI and oceanic heat uptake are the same thing).
PPS--And this latter argument may also well apply to saying that forests will make us cooler--is this really having a big effect on EEI, or just on the local temperatures?
On 3/13/24 9:19 AM, Jeff Suchon wrote:
Hi Oswald--
Regarding the statement that SAI creates a really
different climate on its own is not really justified--the return
is actually quite close. Past climate is not one specific
value--there was variability in the past, what is needed is to
get close. Also, on your seeming abhorrence of SAI. volcanic
eruptions have put far more SO2 in the stratosphere and have you
even noticed the differences being caused (other than the
colorful sunrises and sunsets)?
On Iron aerosols to remove methane, I've not followed the work on this. My question would really relate to how long the iron salt aerosols end up after injection being exposed to the air and whether one gets enough exposure time to really access the amount of methane that needs to be removed. And to get methane down, I think the most effective approach in near term is going to be the new methane satellite, which I think likely to spot a lot of hot spot emission sources, and that actions will be able to be taken to get significant reductions in emissions. I'd rather see the money spent reducing emissions--capturing and using the methane or at least converting it to CO2.
On OIF, this is really yet to be proven as a way
to get CO2 sequestered deep in the ocean instead of having the
potential to return to the atmosphere in the near term. And the
amount that would need to be done is huge--talk abotu a
governance shallenge.
On MCB, in that it will be done regionally, it will have effects on atmospheric circulation, as I've said before--you can't criticize SAI as leading to a different weather without also leveling that criticism at MCB. It is also a quite sensitive process in that, for example, too much seems to lead to compensating clearing. And so there will need to be continuing good knowledge of the background concentrations and more. I'd think it would be much easier to inject SO2 into the free troposphere, so above the boundary layer (doing so through vertical tubes/light pipes held aloft by balloons, locating them on islands (with mountains would be best) out across the low albedo Pacific Ocean. Once in the free troposphere, there would be conversion to sulfates--and injecting aerosols into the free troposphere will have a good bit longer lifetime than the salt aerosols in the boundary layer. And doing this, there would be no need to have just the right type clouds. So create greater reflectivity over the ocean outside of clouds.
Overall, I just am not convinced that all of these
can work together in a sufficiently timely and plausibly
economical way as compared to stratospheric aerosol injection.
It may seem attractive in general concept, but is it really
implementable and would it really have the desired effects when
it done in the great variety of conditions that it would need to
work if scaled up.
Best Mike MacCracken
Dear Michael,
thanks a million for this extensive answer.
Re. SAI. I am not abhorrent myself re. SAI. My abhorrence is more tactical. SAI does not work in the media, it does not work in the public. SAI is a nonstarter. Non-fixable. Kaputt. The risk is that it damages the more palatable methods, that’s why I would like to remove it. But I can live with it being there.
Re. EAMO. The residence time of ISA in the air is a variable depending on the altitude of the release point and weather conditions. To keep it simple: The higher the longer. The more rain the shorter. If you do ISA in dry regions and have a release point at say 2.000 m you can reckon 2 weeks residence time, more or less. This is a preliminary figure, pending on confirmation by atmospheric modelling, but it is not all wrong. With planes we can adapt the altitude, go up to 6.000 m, so we can assume that residence time for good.
I am all in favour of mitigation of methane, as you are. But methane grows faster that CO2 now. It is the biggest threat of mankind, possibly bigger than CO2. Mitigation will not solve the problem. OTOH the methane problem is so much easier to solve than the CO2 problem. EAMO by GRAP is actually very cheap, we talk under 1 USD / ton of CO2e.
Re. MCB. Agreed and accepted, especially your first sentence.
(Re. the engineering of your tubes, for release of SO2. Renaud and I have really thought about that a lot when we tried to build release systems at 2000-4000 m height. This solution is non-doable (without going into detail), you need planes for all heights above 1.000 – 1.500 m, which is the max height for towers.)
Re. OIF. Agreed. We do not know the effectivity. But we do know that the very low concentration of ISA reaching the ground/ocean (we talk about 0.1 ppm in the air) will be harmless. So for now we will treat this as a freebie in our GRAP, like MCB.
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Dear Robert and Robin--I'd just note that while
renewable technologies can be built, what Alexander (Sandy)
MacDonald's studies make clear that this transition can only be
cost viable by creating on every continent a new HV/DC
transmission network that can move the renewable energy around
cost effectively. Otherwise, each region has to build enough
storage and capacity to be able to on its own to have reserves
for, say, 10 days of clouds and no wind. Right now the HV/AC
grid really can't carry electricity around for more than
something less than 500 or so km, which is a distance smaller
than a weather system. Technologically it can be done. Burying
it along railroad and other public rights-of-way can get around
the problem of having to gain rights of way across private
lands--and burying the cables can be done and has many benefits.
So, don't forget the need for a transmission system to move all
the needed energy around.
Mike
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JOHN ENGLANDER
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Twitter: @johnenglander
LinkedIN: linkedin.com/in/johnenglander/
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From Thermodynamic Geoengineering: The solution to Global Warming, how the planet can be serviced with ocean derived energy with a HVDC grid.

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