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On Sep 14, 2023, at 7:23 AM, DV Henkel-Wallace <dv...@bluedotchange.com> wrote:
I liked that the article both supported and opposed carbon dioxide removal.
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On Sep 14, 2023, at 9:54 AM, Daniel <dki...@gmail.com> wrote:
"We" have to adapt. "We," as in our tribe of folks that
understand that we need to restore our climate very rapidly so as
to eliminate tipping responses. We must communicate that
geoengineering is a last resort "in case emergency cooling is
required." The folks that propagate these message of impending
doom are not going to change as their responses are based on fear
of the unknown and they are wildly afraid without the prospects of
something that to them is even more alien that climate change.
As counterintuitive to us as it is, we must accept and support
the legacy climate culture these folks are following, and then add
to their list of woes with clever words that soothe their
nightmares. Logic cannot persuade them. We cannot dismiss their
feelings and beliefs. These emotionally based beliefs are the most
powerful of any beliefs. Let them be and help assuage them by
offering a bandaid for their fears - "research on geoengineering
in case emergency cooling is needed."
This is how I changed the policy of the most conservative
environmental group every known (to me at least), Sierra Club. The
policy team I worked with and the unanimous position of Sierra
Club before this policy team was, "Over our dead body - no
geoengineering anything, including research." But, as the mayhem
mounts, when the concept of geoengineering was addressed to the
policy team as "in case emergency cooling is needed," they readily
agreed to my great astonishment. Amongst ourselves, in our
academic and development settings, we understand the mandate, but
to get this emotionally overwhelming fear under control we have to
throw them a bone. They need and want assurances that their
greatest fear of runaway warming can be tamed. Research on
geoengineering "in case emergency cooling is needed" tames these
fears.
I mean, unless we simply ignore them and proceed upon a policy path where only votes of policy makers matter. This is how the IRA came to be, adapted from the Green New Deal. It was not a public referendum. The same thing will certainly happen with geoengineering - Biden already started it month before last with the White House message on SRM and MCB. But it does help the global psyche if folks understand the message of "in case emergency cooling is needed," and it does grease the skids and gives hope to those who have succumbed to the fear.
It has finally rained in Austin. Days at 100 degrees or greater
stands at 78. At 105 or greater, 42 - beating the old record in
2011 of 26. The 90 day record of 100 or greater from 2011 stands.
B
This peach color is not tannin as we have not had a drop of rain
since August 22, and only about a half inch all summer. I believe
it is pollen, accumulated over at least the last 3 weeks, probably
mostly the summer. It came a roof gutter under asphalt shingles,
from a very light rain over tens of minutes, totaling about 0.05
inches. The August 22 event was a 30 second heavy rain event,
about the same amount, but raindrop impact washed off lots of
accumulated dust resulting in what looked like street runoff. (My
original research was in stormwater runoff pollution treatment.)

August 22nd event

Peach water... More like peach beer when in the wild, away from
its white bucket home.

Below is not fall color but drought-induced leaf drop. Autumn
does not arrive with fall color in Austin until November. This is
Zilker Park, the heart and soul of Austin. This should be a
palette of green. We have no off-colored forest species in Austin
outside of the early spring months. The elms drop their leaves in
the fall during extreme drought, with no apparent harm - so far.
The oaks and other larger trees may or may not recover and the
same with the understory and shrubby species. Junipers do not
recover once they turn. This drought impact to forests, in Central
Texas at least, is as bad as it was in our new Drought of Record
in 2011-2013.

On Sep 14, 2023, at 11:12 AM, Bruce Melton -- Austin, Texas <bme...@earthlink.net> wrote:
"We" have to adapt. "We," as in our tribe of folks that understand that we need to restore our climate very rapidly so as to eliminate tipping responses. We must communicate that geoengineering is a last resort "in case emergency cooling is required." The folks that propagate these message of impending doom are not going to change as their responses are based on fear of the unknown and they are wildly afraid without the prospects of something that to them is even more alien that climate change.
As counterintuitive to us as it is, we must accept and support the legacy climate culture these folks are following, and then add to their list of woes with clever words that soothe their nightmares. Logic cannot persuade them. We cannot dismiss their feelings and beliefs. These emotionally based beliefs are the most powerful of any beliefs. Let them be and help assuage them by offering a bandaid for their fears - "research on geoengineering in case emergency cooling is needed."
This is how I changed the policy of the most conservative environmental group every known (to me at least), Sierra Club. The policy team I worked with and the unanimous position of Sierra Club before this policy team was, "Over our dead body - no geoengineering anything, including research." But, as the mayhem mounts, when the concept of geoengineering was addressed to the policy team as "in case emergency cooling is needed," they readily agreed to my great astonishment. Amongst ourselves, in our academic and development settings, we understand the mandate, but to get this emotionally overwhelming fear under control we have to throw them a bone. They need and want assurances that their greatest fear of runaway warming can be tamed. Research on geoengineering "in case emergency cooling is needed" tames these fears.
I mean, unless we simply ignore them and proceed upon a policy path where only votes of policy makers matter. This is how the IRA came to be, adapted from the Green New Deal. It was not a public referendum. The same thing will certainly happen with geoengineering - Biden already started it month before last with the White House message on SRM and MCB. But it does help the global psyche if folks understand the message of "in case emergency cooling is needed," and it does grease the skids and gives hope to those who have succumbed to the fear.
It has finally rained in Austin. Days at 100 degrees or greater stands at 78. At 105 or greater, 42 - beating the old record in 2011 of 26. The 90 day record of 100 or greater from 2011 stands.
B
This peach color is not tannin as we have not had a drop of rain since August 22, and only about a half inch all summer. I believe it is pollen, accumulated over at least the last 3 weeks, probably mostly the summer. It came a roof gutter under asphalt shingles, from a very light rain over tens of minutes, totaling about 0.05 inches. The August 22 event was a 30 second heavy rain event, about the same amount, but raindrop impact washed off lots of accumulated dust resulting in what looked like street runoff. (My original research was in stormwater runoff pollution treatment.)
August 22nd event
Peach water... More like peach beer when in the wild, away from its white bucket home.
Below is not fall color but drought-induced leaf drop. Autumn does not arrive with fall color in Austin until November. This is Zilker Park, the heart and soul of Austin. This should be a palette of green. We have no off-colored forest species in Austin outside of the early spring months. The elms drop their leaves in the fall during extreme drought, with no apparent harm - so far. The oaks and other larger trees may or may not recover and the same with the understory and shrubby species. Junipers do not recover once they turn. This drought impact to forests, in Central Texas at least, is as bad as it was in our new Drought of Record in 2011-2013.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/52374fb2-43dd-ee19-bc0e-7c274509147a%40earthlink.net.
I'd argue also that there need to be people out front pulling them along into what the future really is, not get pulled back to the position that we are pulling them from, namely that mitigation only can do what is needed. All uniting behind some common view is not going to get the world to where it needs to be.
Mike
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/B166AAC7-E35E-4DBE-9666-552824A9CE69%40gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/c4c23b72-54a8-4d06-6223-10315a5d5618%40comcast.net.
I have sent this letter to The Guardian.
Your article Experts call for global moratorium on efforts to geoengineer climate (14 September) gives a distorted impression of the new report from the Climate Overshoot Commission. In fact, the report advocates expanded research into the range of geoengineering methods proposed to cool the planet, while also recognising that none of these technologies are yet ready for field deployment. Solar geoengineering is an essential adjunct to removing greenhouse gases. Work in this emerging field requires extensive dialogue and cooperation to ensure proper attention to governance, transparency and scientific validation. Such measured efforts are what the Overshoot Commission has called for.
Regards
Robert Tulip
From: planetary-...@googlegroups.com <planetary-...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Daniel
Sent: Thursday, September 14, 2023 11:55 PM
To: H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com>
Cc: DV Henkel-Wallace <dv...@bluedotchange.com>; healthy-planet-action-coalition <healthy-planet-...@googlegroups.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>; 'Eelco Rohling' via NOAC Meetings <noac-m...@googlegroups.com>; geoengineering <geoengi...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [prag] Experts call for global moratorium on efforts to geoengineer climate | Geoengineering | The Guardian
Thanks Herb for the link to the press conference.
Also Barbara (from MEER) just kindly forwarded me the following link for anyone who wants to write a letter to the Guardian regarding their skewed coverage of this matter:
https://www.theguardian.com/info/2022/jun/22/how-to-send-a-letter-to-the-guardian?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Kind regards,
Daniel
On Thu, Sep 14, 2023, 12:39 H simmens <hsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
If anyone can bear to watch the Overshoot Commission discuss the report at its press conference at 10 AM EDT here’s a link:
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/CADtjw38kYeUAv8s-EQs9WMnSbymk%2BjLf92Q1OC_hx8to3Yvycg%40mail.gmail.com.
Oh - no! I am not suggesting that emergency cooling only be deployed as a last resort. It is very likely that we need to implement direct cooling alongside all other solutions. My point is one of psychology and how to gain acceptance of something that is to many, extremely frightening. The narrative of how the Club changed their position from "over our dead body" to "research..." shows how this psychological strategy is valid.
Accepting the fact that emergency cooling may be needed is step
1. Accepting the fact that this can only be accomplished with
geoengineering; step 2. Accepting that research into
geoengineering is required; step 3.
It is extremely useful that the Overshoot Report accepts that
research is needed and this puts us three steps ahead of the
masses.
I am working on the club. I was on a CCS policy team last spring
where we accepted that CCS was needed (a very hard pill for the
Club to support). A new team is forming to look at sequestration
and CO2 pipelines, and I hope to advance the thinking of the
strongest Club climate science resources further.
It is unfortunate that such dedicated advocates are so stubbornly
addicted to their beliefs, but this is the way it is and the only
thing that can effect change otherwise is as I stated previously:
We do not need the support of everyone. We only need the votes of
leaders - or simply the pen of a president, to implement needed
solutions as Biden did with the SRM-MCB position paper last month.
-MeltOn
On Sep 15, 2023, at 12:39 PM, Bruce Melton -- Austin, Texas <bme...@earthlink.net> wrote:
10.4 - gotcha Herb. Yes, quantifying is crucial. This sounds like
an excellent conversation for this group. What is the threshold
where we must implement geoengineering or direct cooling? Have we
truly gone beyond? What can we say to folks like Sierra Club,
(like most) that have just recently acknowledged that there may be
more to climate mitigation other than decarbonization?
Seems like there are a few more steps in this conundrum. Most folks do not acknowledge the need for restoration and assume further warming is safe. This flies in the face of mandatory geoengineering now. Why would emergency cooling be required if it is safe to warm further to 1.5 C? How do we get beyond this legacy belief threshold?
The jump to supporting research on geoengineering is easy because
it is a precautionary action that is vastly limited in scope
relative to a "moratorium" on geoengineering.
What is the "easy button" for this next step?
It seems one solution is tied to restoration. We must restore because tipping collapse responses are active and they do not self-restore unless the perturbation to the systems is removed (restoration to the Holocene, less than 1 C warming). This of course means 1.5 C and tipping becomes irreversible. Time frames are also critical and likely far sooner than the standard 2100 date. But, what pushes this concept over the edge like with "research on geoengineering in case emergency cooling is needed"?
And, I am off filming Sunday in the wee hours and will not be able to keep up with this thread for a couple of weeks. I will jump back in when we return.
-MeltOn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/A9E14C9D-9D3B-4836-8A02-62BE3EEAC8C5%40gmail.com.
Science and facts generally are not going to change opinions of
"believers." Until millions or at least hundreds of thousands die
from discrete events, facts will not help. Emotionally based
beliefs are mostly immune to such lines of reasoning as fact. What
changes opinion are personal impacts, authority figures, peers,
and then facts, in that order.
To make a difference, we cannot just repeat facts. This has been
shown over and over again to be a non-starter with
emotionally-based beliefs.
What we need is some kind of logic that speaks to this sensible
concept of "in case emergency cooling is needed."
But what is this sensible logic when considering and implementing a threshold for geoengineering?
And personally, I limit my participation in policy issues to spreading the word about global warming psychology on lists such as this, and working at the top on getting votes to support things like the IRA's IRS45Q enhancements. I have tried and tired for literally longer than anyone officially on the payroll - since 2005. It's a very time consuming challenge where time is much better spent in other ways in my opinion.
!!! And our filmwork of course! Personal impacts are the single
most important way to change hard-held beliefs. Filmwork of
climate change impacts is second best to personal impacts because
"seeing is believing." It is personal when one sees something with
their own eyes. So, why don't images of climate catastrophes in
the built environment carry more weight? They are weighty, but
their reporting is often vague on cause, the old nemesis of ours
"that we can't tell yet" is ever present, and then there is
catastrophe fatigue. Even tens of thousands of deaths don't seem
to move the needle much any more. This is why I say 100s of
thousand or a million or more deaths in a discrete event is what
it will take to change opinion.
--other than some clever and sensible concept like, "in case
emergency cooling is needed."
-MeltOn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/CAD7Z-DC_tANC%2BcpuzOXtTq5iwRzgUjABwW-fjoduCUnqpfd1hA%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/35e2ec34-7f1d-6b67-0951-7b1093749844%40earthlink.net.
Oye Vey . Around and around in circles the conversation goes....Why is this guy the Chair anyway?
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Sep 15, 2023 at 5:21 PM
Subject: Re: [prag] Experts call for global moratorium on efforts to geoengineer climate | Geoengineering | The Guardian
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/CACS_FxoXaCN8ox4FC87Hxks4UnRj3qvby6CyLCdUdPPcVg1OcQ%40mail.gmail.com.
Hi John and all.
Net zero in the common climate culture is a non sequitur to the
climate solutions discussion where it is used as a lever to
advance emissions eliminations. There is no science that says we
must reduce emissions, this is what the scenarios say. The science
says we must return forcing to Holocene levels. Emissions
eliminations cannot do this in time frames that matter to tipping
collapses.
My work documenting Earth system collapses becomes more profound
every year. Feedback emissions from Earth systems collapses have
begun and will grow far greater than humankind's with no
additional warming because once begun, collapses do not stabilize
unless their systems boundary conditions are restored before the
point of no return.
Emergency cooling is very likely indicated, but as you say, the
fear is great. Unfounded or not, it exists. By using the strategic
discussion of "geoengineering research is needed in case emergency
cooling is required", we can short-circuit this fear and advance
deeper thought on geoengineering strategies. This doesn't mean our
efforts for emergency cooling are belayed. Prudent engineering
addresses the lead up to action where planning and funding sources
move ahead in an emergency, while some of the implementation is
still being thought out.
Long-term sustainability is what has gotten us into the mess we
are in. There have been some successes, but mostly not and delay
rules. Like carbon emissions regulations, there are no (few)
incentives to sustain. As long as there are no rules,
sustainability --like decarbonization-- will not happen in time
frames that matter.
An emergency requires we act with the tools at hand. The sustainability challenge must be disconnected from the emergency as further delay is untenable.
MeltOn
This year's summer filming logs are below. Please like, follow
and share - this is how we get posts to show in more feeds and
increase awareness.
'Sup John and all,
Net zero and future emissions elimination cannot change our
future because tipping systems have activated and they do not
self-stabilize unless current warming is removed before the point
of no return. Elimination of future emissions does not remove
current warming in time frames that matter.
The solution I propose is to have parallel projects: one focussing on cooling interventions to bring down temperatures in the Arctic and elsewhere starting ASAP; and one expanding the existing emissions reduction project to include measures to bring down the level of GHGs to a safe level within 50 years, i.e. within the lifetime of the young people of today.
It's likely that 50 years will see passing the irreversible
tipping point of no return in many systems as per IPCC, and IPCC
is quite understated when it comes to effects.
I agree on emergency cooling with geoengineering, but there is a
steep trail here with acceptance on many levels and prudent
emergency management says we must act with the tools at hand to
save lives. And of course, we must do everything all at once.
Emergency cooling is the lead time item but there are even more
risks of maintaining geoengineering for long periods rather than
just the challenges faced right now of fear from lack of robust
understanding. This is why we need to do everything all at once
that includes CDR with the tools at hand that can be scaled
rapidly, vs. new tech.
Why are the three 100-year old mature CDR process not included in the manifesto (cryseparation, lime-potash and amines)? These processes have over 200, 1 million ton per year units committed right now under the IRA's, IRS 45Q cash pay. They are widespread in industry and individual components are even more widespread with known scaling factors. Because of this widespread nature in industry, the time to completion on these units is far faster than other CDR strategies that are actually nascent.
There is a strong line in a critical path where actions that do not significantly contribute to the project goal are defocused. In addition, net zero emissions accumulated by mid-century are on the order of about 250 Gt CO2, whereas mandatory restoration CDR is more like 1,250 Gt CO2. What this means is that today we must scale our existing kiloton CDR processes by 100,000 percent to be able to remove 1,250 Gt in 20 years (by mid-century) to prevent tipping completion. Scaling this CDR infrastructure another 20 percent to address future emissions is a simple task.
Below is my latest favorite discussion starter on the suitability of existing CDR processes to address accumulated climate pollution:
We Can Reverse Climate Change Because of Beer
Cryoseparation of air… Carl Linde was a Nobel Prize Winner in 1913 for his refrigeration invention and advancements in the science of distillation of the constituent components of air (cryoseparation). Linde began working on his ice machine in the early 1870s. In 1879, Carl Linde gave up his professorship at the Technical University of Munich to found "Linde's Ice Machine Company." This company made possible one of the greatest developments of the human culture of all time – summer beer. Historically, summer beer was contaminated by different warm tolerant bacteria that fouled the beer. Because of this contamination, Bavaria banned the warm season brewing of beer. Linde's ice machine made summer beer possible and he had sold 747 of his machines by 1890. In 1892 Guinness Brewing contracted with Linde to build a carbon dioxide liquefaction plant to sell their fermentation waste CO2 as an industrial chemical. Linde accomplished this contract by doubling his refrigeration process to get pressures high enough and temperatures low enough to liquefy air, from which he separated the CO2 through distillation. Linde then focused his company on very low temperature refrigeration and the liquefaction of gases from air. Today, the Linde Group (Air Products) is a leading global industrial gases and engineering company with 2022 sales of $33 billion. In 1897 Linde was knighted as Ritter von Linde for his achievements in Bavarian brewing technology and refrigeration.
MeltOn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/CACS_FxrM2ki0Sf%2BrNyKQOA3izUvOxi4moKJHOOFMs1vz6SryQg%40mail.gmail.com.
'Sup John and all,
Net zero and future emissions elimination cannot change our
future because tipping systems have activated and they do not
self-stabilize unless current warming is removed before the point
of no return. Elimination of future emissions does not remove
current warming in time frames that matter.
The solution I propose is to have parallel projects: one focussing on cooling interventions to bring down temperatures in the Arctic and elsewhere starting ASAP; and one expanding the existing emissions reduction project to include measures to bring down the level of GHGs to a safe level within 50 years, i.e. within the lifetime of the young people of today.
It's likely that 50 years will see passing the irreversible
tipping point of no return in many systems as per IPCC, and IPCC
is quite understated when it comes to effects.
I agree on emergency cooling with geoengineering, but there is a
steep trail here with acceptance on many levels and prudent
emergency management says we must act with the tools at hand to
save lives. And of course, we must do everything all at once.
Emergency cooling is the lead time item but there are even more
risks of maintaining geoengineering for long periods rather than
just the challenges faced right now of fear from lack of robust
understanding. This is why we need to do everything all at once
that includes CDR with the tools at hand that can be scaled
rapidly, vs. new tech.
Why are the three 100-year old mature CDR process not included in the manifesto (cryseparation, lime-potash and amines)? These processes have over 200, 1 million ton per year units committed right now under the IRA's, IRS 45Q cash pay. They are widespread in industry and individual components are even more widespread with known scaling factors. Because of this widespread nature in industry, the time to completion on these units is far faster than other CDR strategies that are actually nascent.
There is a strong line in a critical path where actions that do not significantly contribute to the project goal are defocused. In addition, net zero emissions accumulated by mid-century are on the order of about 250 Gt CO2, whereas mandatory restoration CDR is more like 1,250 Gt CO2. What this means is that today we must scale our existing kiloton CDR processes by 100,000 percent to be able to remove 1,250 Gt in 20 years (by mid-century) to prevent tipping completion. Scaling this CDR infrastructure another 20 percent to address future emissions is a simple task.
Below is my latest favorite discussion starter on the suitability of existing CDR processes to address accumulated climate pollution:
We Can Reverse Climate Change Because of Beer
Cryoseparation of air… Carl Linde was a Nobel Prize Winner in 1913 for his refrigeration invention and advancements in the science of distillation of the constituent components of air (cryoseparation). Linde began working on his ice machine in the early 1870s. In 1879, Carl Linde gave up his professorship at the Technical University of Munich to found "Linde's Ice Machine Company." This company made possible one of the greatest developments of the human culture of all time – summer beer. Historically, summer beer was contaminated by different warm tolerant bacteria that fouled the beer. Because of this contamination, Bavaria banned the warm season brewing of beer. Linde's ice machine made summer beer possible and he had sold 747 of his machines by 1890. In 1892 Guinness Brewing contracted with Linde to build a carbon dioxide liquefaction plant to sell their fermentation waste CO2 as an industrial chemical. Linde accomplished this contract by doubling his refrigeration process to get pressures high enough and temperatures low enough to liquefy air, from which he separated the CO2 through distillation. Linde then focused his company on very low temperature refrigeration and the liquefaction of gases from air. Today, the Linde Group (Air Products) is a leading global industrial gases and engineering company with 2022 sales of $33 billion. In 1897 Linde was knighted as Ritter von Linde for his achievements in Bavarian brewing technology and refrigeration.
MeltOn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/CACS_FxrM2ki0Sf%2BrNyKQOA3izUvOxi4moKJHOOFMs1vz6SryQg%40mail.gmail.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/bb4862e1-e34a-4afb-a724-367d0d4293ca%40earthlink.net.
This is why I convinced Sierra Club to change their position on geoengineering from "over our dead body" for anything geoengineering including research, to "Sierra Club supports research into geoengineering in case emergency cooling is needed."
Critically though is the critical path. It's an emergency and any
emergency says to act immediately with the tools at hand to save
lives. This means moving forward with emissions controls\ but
primarily, immediately building a carbon removal infrastructure
and doing that critical research in geoengineering, "in case
emergency cooling is needed"... which of course it is needed.
MeltOn
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/planetary-restoration/bb4862e1-e34a-4afb-a724-367d0d4293ca%40earthlink.net.
John,
Industry has told us that the three mature, 100-year old air
capture processes are indeed viable, as they are investing
hundreds of $billions to capitalize on the IRA's IRS 45Q
enhancements. No further understanding of these processes is
needed by advocates. It's happening. Over 200, 1 million ton per
year units have been committed by 2035.
And yes, emergency cooling should move forward immediately, but how fast can we overcome the fear and lack of robustness of these strategies in the eyes of governing bodies and consensus science organizations upon which policy is based? Obviously as our Earth systems collapses become worse and worse, without even further warming, a tipping threshold in policy and motivation will arise. But what about critical path theory as it applies to emergency response?
Do we belay air capture because of perception created by reticent consensus science reporting? Or do we do as enlightened leaders have decreed via the IRA's bottomless air capture pay -- as industry is now so widely committed? Do we continue to sit idly by while geoengineering gains acceptance, while Earth systems collapses move towards the point of no return? Or do we do what we normally do as a society in any emergency and respond with the tools at hand to save lives?
MeltOn
Changing beliefs...
I see you going in two different directions John: trying to
convince Me (or our other readers) that geoengineering is now
required, and the direction your three initial questions lead (How
do you change minds? What facts have changed? What is the new
reality?), which is basically the mission of my nonprofit.
The mission of my nonprofit is to understand why our culture does
not trust climate scientists when we trust almost all other
climate scientists implicitly. Based on this understanding, the
path towards greater climate change awareness lies through
emotionally based outreach (right brain learning to some), not
traditional analytical based learning (left brain learning to
others).
The first direction; I believe almost all on this list are
onboard with the need for emergency cooling. The methods - meh...
This is one of the principle reasons for this list (and many like
it), to discuss these methods in a scholarly way and seed further
thought. The second direction is the one we all struggle with -
"how in the world do we get the message across that we are all
toast already because of warming effects currently in motion, that
result in untenable scenarios with massive natural feedback
emission that dwarf humankind's, unless we restore our climate
before the point of no return?"
In the '90s and early 2000s, there was an increase in climate awareness that has been stalled completely ever since. Why did this happen? This was the beginning of the Climate Change Counter Movement (CCCM). George Dubya was one of its primary principals. He promised carbon cap and trade in his platform and two weeks after inauguration in 2001 reneged and decimated early US carbon regulations. Why did this change happen? For a decade, the fossil fuel industrial complex (FFIX) was onboard with emissions limitations, just as they have been onboard with pollutant limiting regulations since the 1970s. I believe the roots of the CCCM were in Reaganomics, but it was a decade before the trickle up philosophy blended with the understanding that the FFIX was big enough, wealthy enough, and influential enough to resist.
It was during this period that our climate change culture became locked in with a fossil fuel elimination psychology through a systematic program of sustainability strategies that would make our global culture independent of fossil fuels, create agriculture that somehow sequestered more carbon than it emitted, and do away with deforestation. What was missing was simply treating climate pollution like we have treated pollution since its discovery: by treating it so we can be safe.
The combination of this altruistic sustainability quest remains
as the mechanism that could so easily result in the demise of
modern human culture. The question now is how do we use current
knowledge to overcome this momentum of ignorance?
It is quite widespread in the literature that science alone
cannot overcome widespread, long-held beliefs. What can overcome
these entrenched beliefs is emotionally-based outreach centered on
personal experience, authority figures, images and narrative,
roughly in that order.
Our outreach should cater to this list -- how do we do this?
Personal Experience... This is the most powerful form of awareness. We need to have outreach ready to launch to our outlets for those times when climate catastrophe strikes. Personal outreach also means viewing of catastrophe on the television and in other media. Outreach supplied during these times has a greater opportunity to break through norms and create deep thinking.
Authority Figures... We trust authority figures. This is how the radical right has risen even though their counsel is so very often considered to be wildly dangerous most scholars. We aren't likely to change the opinions of radical right leaders, but we have many other sources of authority figures to work with. Our screen and music celebrities are the greatest resource we have as so many of them are already active in environmental and social causes. From Jane Fonda to Taylor Swift (ohmygosh!), to Leonardo DeCaprio and Sean Penn, these and those like them are our targets. What they say can be multiplied thousand and million fold. Other lesser authority figures work as well, just not as well.
Images and Narrative... Images alone can make a difference, but when paired with personal experience and authority figures, images and narrative tell the story; the story that is delivered by personal experience (and) or authority figures. Narrative is the tool we use on this list, and the tool traditionally used by analytical science learning. When narrative is combined with images, seeing is believing becomes emotionally based learning. It is important to understand that an analytical narrative is often not a very good learning tool, at least not with the baggage of our climate culture. Traditional narrative needs to be spiced up with tales from the effects of climate change, or tales from the hunt and the performance of the science. Even the bios of scientists or reporters works or mundane relation of blisters on the trail, camp food, interminable airport delays, or equipment failure catastrophes. The goal is to blunt the shear force of dismay with facts about our current climate peril. To much fear and the reader/viewer or listener is lost. One of the most important failures of climate science outreach is that it has not been delivered like anti-climate science outreach with an emphasis on emotional strategies. The fear, doubt, denial and delay propagated by the CCCM is the perfect example of what to do with climate science learning. It has completely destroyed not only climate science awareness, but many other aspects of our culture's trust with scientists. To regain control of awareness, we need to practice what the CCCM practices, and deliver climate science education with emotional-based strategies that are far more effective than the way science has always been learned.
Postscript...
I believe there are about a dozen priority items on our climate
awareness list and the Arctic is only one of them. These items are
our Earth systems that are now actively in collapse. Most of these
are capable of themselves creating natural feedback emissions that
dwarf humankind's. About half have feedbacks that increase the
speed and intensity of others' activated tipping collapses. The
Arctic is one of this half that have dynamic relationships with
other tipping collapse systems, but just one. Forests are
immensely important to our world with dynamic relationships and
teleconnections that rival or surpass those of the Arctic, and
they too are in collapse. Ever year I spend several weeks-long
periods documenting impacts of climate change effects on forests
from insects, water stress and fire across North America. Every
year impacts are nonlinearly worse. Part of the solution is
emergency cooling, but we cannot implement emergency cooling
rapidly enough with our current global appreciation of
geoengineering. This will take time. The emergency response
critical path I speak of needs to be addressed. We need to do what
we can with the tools at hand to address the emergency. Waiting on
the global psyche to be ready for geoengineering is like waiting
on the global psyche to embrace the failed sustainability
strategies we have been attempting for thirty years to address
climate pollution, and for 30 years before that to address
resource depletion and anthropogenic degradation of ecologies.
The big picture must be addressed, not just a piece of it. And, we must understand the limits of our legacy policy to change the course of activated tipping collapses. This understanding is required so that we do not waste precious resources with actions that cannot change the fate of humanity. The primary mission now is to get a restoration goal accepted by our climate culture. Until this goal is set, the future will be one of further warming to 1.5 C, which of course, will not turn out well.
Laying out the other parts of the critical path is important too,
but if we get too deep into these other parts before a restoration
goal is accepted, the other parts work against the primary goal of
setting a restoration target. This does not mean that scholarly
work on strategies and planning does not continue with the utmost
urgency, it means that there are repercussions to the concepts we
present. Geoengineering is the worst because of preconceived
notions.
MeltOn
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I feel your pain John. I have been in very similar pain since I
started the nonprofit in 2005.
What I have developed as an outreach strategy comes directly from
the global warming psychology as the mechanisms to overcome the
fear, delay, and denial. Limiting fear-inducing words helps,
showing images helps but images of impacts to the built
environment are pretty mean and require extra effort to keep from
creating fear. My work on the Camp Fire in Paradise CA in 2018,
where 14,000 homes burned in 6 hours - that's a tough one. But we
must limit the frightening aspects or we only feed into the fear
that creates the denial and delay. When one has to use impacts to
the built environment in their outreach, I find this concept
useful: Climate change-caused fire is a horrendous thing to the
built environment as fire is horrendous in any circumstance; but
in fire there is rebirth.
Hansen uses the good news strategy in his 2008, "Target Atmospheric CO2, where should humanity aim?" (This is the work where Hansen developed the 350 ppm CO2 target.) What Hansen says is, "Paleoclimate evidence and ongoing global changes imply that today’s CO2, about 385 ppm, is already too high to maintain the climate to which humanity, wildlife, and the rest of the biosphere are adapted. Realization that we must reduce the current CO2 amount [ to 350 ppm or below] has a bright side: effects that had begun to seem inevitable, including impacts of ocean acidification, loss of fresh water supplies, and shifting of climatic zones, may be averted."
There is lots and lots of good news, we just need to remember to
start including these things in our outreach and cite them often.
This is how we keep folks attention and prevent them from clicking
on the next article that doesn't scare them so badly.
One of my recent favorites... Climate restoration means
not only cooling our atmosphere, but cooling our oceans too. This
will happen faster than we warmed them because of negative
feedbacks (evaporation and ocean heat burial) that increases the
rate of cooling. These two things are also responsible for the
fact that our oceans temperature lags atmospheric temperature.
When we restore our climate then, and restore our oceans'
temperature or at least the upper- and upper mid-oceans that are
the easiest and fastest to cool, we actually can regain some of
the sea level rise we have experienced because about half of sea
level rise has been caused by expansion of warming waters. Cool
those waters and we get some of the rise in sea level back.
Effective outreach does not just get the facts of something
across in plain and accurate grammar. It compels the reader/viewer
or listener to think deeply, and not abandon the content because
it is boring or frightening. This is why storytelling is so
important. The stories take one's mind off of the menacing facts
being presented and momentarily give the brain a rest from all the
stress. All these strategies allow the mind to be less cluttered.
Fear is a really big clutterer of the mind.
So with your example of needing a trial of SAI to show...
Outreach can encourage folks to accept that, yes we do need trials
of SAI and other geoengineering strategies. The work that Keith
has done on calcite instead of sulfate is promising and has good
news in it. Yes there has been subsequent work that shows calcite
might not be quite as good as Keith's earliest work, but the good
news remains: calcite likely does not nuke stratospheric ozone
whereas sulfate likely does. Add to this the reality that the
Antarctic ozone hole is nowhere near healed, and actually could go
either way - a thing that is not common in popular press but
looking at antarctic ozone concentrations and ozone holes size it
is obvious; therefore a strategy that both provides direct
emergency cooling AND enhances antarctic stratospheric ozone is a
really good thing.
The good news tempers the frightening facts. All we have to do is deliver both at the same time.
And as a last resort, we can just get Taylor Swift to deliver our
outreach! Ohmygosh!
MeltOn
Hi Bruce,
You are right that fear breeds denial and delay. This is what we have seen with climate change; but now we need realism and speed of response. Dangerous climate change is now the reality. We can’t get speed from net zero, which will take decades. The only speed we can get is from rapid cooling intervention and the most powerful and fastest to deploy is SAI.
A distinguished expert on such intervention, Ken Caldeira wrote in a 2006 paper that delay in deployment was acceptable until dangerous climate change was imminent, since the cooling could be affected very quickly. But now that dangerous climate change is upon us we find that there is a barrier of fear around the very intervention which could save the day. This fear needs to be dispelled by simple experimentation to determine whether SAI could be deployed safely or not. Climate models suggest that injection in the region between 45N and 65N would limit the lifetime of the SO2 to a few months, so the experiment could be quickly halted if there were signs of calamitous effects. Recent research on sub-polar deployment suggests there would be no calamities, even if injection in this region were ramped up sufficiently to start refreezing the Arctic. Thus SAI has the potential to reverse the trend towards extreme events caused by a sticking jet stream. By refreezing the Arctic several other tipping processes would be halted, thus forestalling other dangerous trends. Together with decarbonisation, this can be the first of a number of interventions to return the planet to a safe, sustainable, biodiverse and productive state.
I don’t know how much of this I can get into my letter to the Guardian, which was discussed at the PRAG meeting yesterday.
Cheers, John
P.S. Thanks for your ideas, Dale Anne. I will follow them up after I've got my letter to the Guardian sorted.
Dale Anne,
Good to know about KNMI. The US National Weather Service is
agnostic on climate change longer than their seasonal outlook. Our
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) however,
has a pretty aggressive take on sea level rise that is some double
to triple IPCC. But, a further warming target is ubiquitous in the
States and little heed is given to NOAA's sea level rise
projections.
What is the position of the KNMI on restoration vs a further warming 1.5 C target?
Cheers,
B
John and all,
Public letters and or letters to the editor (LTEs) are extremely
important in global warming psychology. They are letters to us
from us, our peers. Our peers are deemed authority figures by the
psychology. LTEs are the pivotal action of Citizen's Climate Lobby
not only because of the outsized influence they have on the
public, but elected officials read them to better understand their
constituents. This group has an extremely well developed
psychology for delivering meaningful outreach. It includes not
only hope, but delivery of good news. See
CCL's LTE training here. The Austin American Statesman
probably publishes one or two LTEs on climate every week. Probably
95 percent of these are from the local Third Coast CCL Group's LTE
campaign.
One thing to remember about emergency restoration cooling
is that it delivers the same exact effect on impacts as does
atmospheric removal (with the exception of permanence and risk of
cessation of course), whereas a further warming target increases
extremes nonlinearly. Emergency restoration cooling can be
delivered in single digit years, whereas removal will take over a
decade and 1.5 C is further warming. Direct cooling will still
take time to cool our oceans and belay many of the extremes we are
experiencing, but there is no difference in direct cooling and
cooling through atmospheric removal besides the aforementioned.
Cooling is cooling. The effects we see in the literature that show
direct cooling does not affect extremes or effects global weather
patterns adversely, are an artifact of this great warming
experiment we have carried out. Of course there will be some
effects lingering, or even worsening, when we first cool our
atmosphere whether it be from geoengineering or atmospheric
removal. These strategies both cause the temperature differential
between the atmosphere and oceans to increase if carried out in
short enough time frames that matter. This increased temperature
differential is responsible for the further changes in weather
patters or extremes. But the duration of these different and
possibly even more extreme extremes or patterns is short, relative
to further warming scenarios.
Oceans both heat and cool with a lag. This lag with
geoengineering creates dynamics that are not present in today's
warmed world but appear when we cool because of the
atmospheric/ocean temperature differential. This is what the
models are showing but what they don't show is what happens when
both the oceans and atmosphere cool back to the Holocene, which is
restoration. There will of course be some hangover with some
systems. All sea level rise cannot be restored but some can, vs
our current beliefs that sea level rise is locked in and will only
increase (of course it only increases with our current further
warming target). Collapsing biological systems will take
generations to regenerate, but most of them will
regenerate. There is lots of good news. It needs to be
communicated along with the bad to soften the cycle of bad news
and fear.
When the oceans cool, our climate is restored. Impacts are not
locked in, we can go back. These are all good news. I have just
mentioned at least half dozen or more pieces of good news that the
public is either unaware of or has different ideas about because
of the way scenarios and modeling works and the poor outreach
provided by popular media that knows no better. This information
is vital to helping expedite folks getting over their fear of
geoengineering.
MeltOn
Hi Daleanne
The Netherlands situation shows the urgency of rebrightening the planet to mitigate sea level rise. Any delay is culpable, given the expected loss of productive land.
We would like help to get an engineer to work with Stephen Salter in Edinburgh, to ensure his vast understanding of marine cloud brightening is properly understood and conveyed.
Refreeze the Arctic Foundation and other sympathetic groups could add to the generous support given to Cambridge for MCB by funding the review and construction of Stephen’s wind tunnel aerosol testing design at his workshop in Edinburgh.
Thanks
Robert Tulip
From: planetary-...@googlegroups.com <planetary-...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of daleanne bourjaily
Sent: Tuesday, October 10, 2023 7:35 PM
To: Bruce Melton -- Austin, Texas <bme...@earthlink.net>
Cc: John Nissen <johnnis...@gmail.com>; Planetary Restoration <planetary-...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [prag] Experts call for global moratorium on efforts to geoengineer climate | Geoengineering | The Guardian
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